"1^ atljata, JJew ^Dtk Date Due JUN"g-!9 s) c3 a a 5 (J3 C] -.J fe g o o g o s s CO Cd H ■god. H 1 2 3 4 5 6 No manure 20 loads barn-yard manure 150 pounds sulphate of ammonia 300 pounds superphosphate of lime 400 pounds Peruvian guano 400 pounds of " cancerine," or fish manure 75 82i 85 88 90 85 12 10 30 10 30 20 87 115 98 120 105 7i 10 13 15 10 18 13 28 11 33 18 Iviii INTRODUCTION. As before stated, the land was of a stronger nature than that on which the first set of experiments was made, and it was evidently in better condition, as the plot having no manure produced twenty bushels of ears of com per acre more than the plot without manure in the other field. On plot 4, 300 pounds of superphosphate of lime gives a total increase of eleven bushels of ears of corn per acre over the unmanured plot, agreeing exactly with the increase obtained from the same quantity of the same manure on plot 5, in the first set of experiments. Plot 3, dressed with 150 pounds of sulphate of ammonia per acre, gives a total increase of 28 bushels of ears of corn per acre over the unmanured plot, and an increase of 22 J bushels of ears per acre over plot 2, which received twenty loads of good, well-rotted barn-yard dung per acre. Plot 5, with 400 pounds of Peruvian guano per acre, gives the best crop of this series, viz : an in- crease of 33 bushels of ears of corn per acre over the unmanured plot, and 27 J over the plot manured with twenty loads of barn-yard dung. The 400 pounds of " cancerine," an artificial manure made in New Jersey, from fish, gives a total increase of 18 bushels of ears per acre over the unmanured plot, and 12^ bushels more than that manured with barn-yard dung ; though 5 bushels of ears of sound corn and 10 bushels of " nubbins" per acre less than the same quantity of Peruvian guano. At the present price of Indian corn, artificial manures can be used with considerable profit, but the main dependence of the farmer must still be on barn-yard manure. The light, concentrated fertil- izers should be used as auxiliaries to barn-yard manure. In this way they will prove of great advan- tage. Anything which increases the crop of Indian corn increases the means of making more manure, and that of a better quality. The great bulk of our farmers, however, will still rely on natural sources for their manure ; and, happily, there are comparatively few soils on which Indian corn will not produce a fair return if the soil is thoroughly cultivated. "With our improved horsehoes and cultivators, there is no excuse for those farmers who neglect to keep their corn land mellow and entirely free from weeds. When this is done, we can, in ordinary seasons, and on the majority of soils, be sure of a good crop of Indian corn. It must be confessed, however, that there are too many farmers who fail to practice this thorough culti- vation. One of the greatest advantages of the corn crop is, that, being planted in rows at from three to four feet apart, the horsehoe can be used to clean the land. In this respect Indian corn is a "fallow crop;" and it is much to be regretted that so many farmers neglect to avail themselves of this means of cleaning their land. They would find that the repeated stirring of the soil would not only destroy the weeds, but would make the soil moister in dry weather, and increase its fertility by developing the plant-food locked up in the land. Thorough cultivation alone, would double the average yield of Indian corn in the United States, besides leaving the land cleaner and in much better condition for fiiture crops. INTRODUCTION. lix RYE. Bushels of rye produced in, 1860. STATES. BUSHELS. Alabama Arkansas California Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine , Maryland Massachusetts.. . Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri New Hampshire. New Jersey New York North Carolina. . Ohio Oregon 72, 457 78, 092 52, 140 618,702 27, 209 21,306 115, 532 951, 281 463, 495 183, 022 3,833 1, 055, 260 36, 065 123, 287 518, 901 388, 085 514, 129 121, 411 39, 474 293, 2G2 128, 247 1, 439, 497 4, 786, 905 436, 856 683,686 2,704 STATES. Pennsylvania. . . Rhode Island . . South Carolina. Tennessee.'. — Texas Vermont Virginia Wisconsin BUSHELS. Total, States. TERRITORIES. District of Columbia. Dakota Nebraska Nevada New Mexico Utah Washington w Total, Territories. Aggregate , 474, 788 28, 259 89, 091 257, 989 111, 860 139, 271 944, 330 888, 544 21, 088, 970 6,919 700 2,495 98 1,300 754 144 12, 410 21, 101, 380 The amount of rye produced in the United States in 1840 was 18,645,567 bushels; in 1850, 14,188,813 bushels; and in 1860, 21,101,380 bushels. Pennsylvania and New York are the largest producers of rye. These two States produce nearly as much rye as all the other States and Territories together. New Jersey also produces largely, raising nearly as much rye as wheat. It is a crop well adapted for light sandy soils, and in the neigh- borhood of large cities is a profitable crop, not so much, however, for the grain as for the straw. The following table shows the amount of rye raised in the New England States in 1860, as com- pared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Connecticut 618,702 600,893 Maine 123,287 102,916 Massachusetts 388,085 481,021 New Hampshire 128.247 183,117 Rhode Island 28.259 26,409 Vermont 1^9,271 1^6,233 1, 425, 851 1, 570, 589 Ix INTRODUCTION. The production of rye ia the New England States, has fallen off somewhat since 1850, and yet more since 1840. They continue, however, to raise more rye than wheat. In 1860 the New England States produced only 1,077,285 bushels of wheat, against 1,425,851 bushels of rye. The following table shows the amount of rye raised in the middle States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. New York 4,786,905 4,148,182 New Jersey 1, 439, 497 1, 255, 578 Pennsylvania , - - 5, 474, 788 4, 805, 160 Maryland 518, 901 226, 014 Delaware 27,209 8,066 District of Columbia 6,919 5,509 12, 254, 219 10, 448, 509 The production of rye has increased in all the middle States. It has increased more than three- fold in Delaware, and more than double in Maryland. It is, however, a small crop in these States. Pennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey produce nearly all the rye raised in the middle States. The following table shows the amount of rye raised in the western States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Ohio 683, 686 425, 918 Indiana 463, 495 78, 792 Michigan 514, 129 105, 871 Illinois :-. 951, 281 83, 364 Wisconsin 888, 544 81, 253 Iowa...... 183,022 19,916 Missouri. . , 293, 262 44, 268 Kentucky 1, 055, 260 415, 073 Kansas 3, 833 Nebraska 2, 495 Minnesota 121, 411 125 5, 160, 418 1, 254, 580 There is a marked increase in the production of rye in all the western States. In the aggregate there is four times as much rye raised in the western States as in 1850. Rye, however, is not an im- portant crop in the west. Pennsylvania alone produces more rye than all the western States. The following table shows the amount of rye raised in the southern States in 1860, as compared with 1850: Virginia North Carolina South Carolina Georgia Alabama Louisiana Texas .'. , Mississippi Arkansas , Tennessee Florida 1860. 1850. 944, 330 458, 930 436, 856 229, 563 89, 091 43, 790 115, 532 63, 750 72, 457 17, 261 36, 065 475 111, 860 3,108 39, 474 9,606 78, 092 8,047 257, 989 89, 137 21, 306 1,152 2, 203, 052 1, 014, 819 INTRODUCTION. Ixi The production of rye in the southern States, it will be seen, has doubled since 1850. Virginia and North Carolina are, by far, the largest producers of rye in the southern States, though there it is by no means an important crop. The following table shows the amount of rye raised in the Pacific States in 1860, as compared with 1850: I860. 1850. California 52, 140 Oregon. 2,704 106 New Mexico 1, 300 Washington 144 Utah 754 210 57, 042 316 California produces nearly all the rye grown in the Pacific States, though there it is not exten- sively cultivated. The following table shows the amount of rye raised in the diiferent sections of the United States in 1850 and in 1860, in proportion to the population: I860. 1850. New England States 0.42 0.57 Western States 0.49 0.19 Middle States 1.47 1.57 Southern States 0.27 0.13 Pacific States 0.10 0.001 United States 0.66 0.64 Much more rye than wheat is raised in New England, and the crop has increased, as we have before shown from 1850 to 1860, but, as the above table shows, it has hardly kept pace with the increase in population. There is nearly half a bushel of rye raised in the New England States to each inhabitant. The western States also raise about half a bushel of rye to each person. There is nearly three times as much rye raised in the western States to each inhabitant as was raised in 1850. The middle States produce about one and a half bushel of rye to each inhabitant. There is, however, a slight falling ofi" in proportion to population since 1850, In the States and Territories there were sixty-four hundredths of a bushel of rye raised to each inhabitant in 1850, and sixty-six hundredths in 1860, showing a slight increase in proportion to population. CULTUEE OF RYE. Of all the bread-plants, rye will succeed best on the driest and poorest soils. It will grow where wheat, barley, oats, and Indian corn would fail. "With the aid of a little manure it can be grown year after year on the same soil. It is exceedingly grateful for manure, and its application to this crop is quite profitable, especially in localities where the straw is in demand. Rye can be sown either earlier or later than winter wheat. In sections where corn cannot be harvested in time to sow winter wheat, rye is frequently substituted after Indian corn. In England and in France, on the light soils where wheat alone is rather an uncertain crop, it is com- mon to sow rye with the wbeat — say half a bushel of rye to two bushels of wheat. Large crops are thus produced, and the farmers use the mixture, when ground and bolted, for domestic use. It is called "monk corn." In Grermany, under the name of "meslin," in France, "meteil," the same mix- ture is extensively used. There is no sweeter bread than that made of these mixed grains, and its long retention of moisture would render it valuable and popular as an army bread. Production of wheat, rije, and corn, in proportion to population. — It may be well here to group together the principal breacl-crops of the United States for the years 1850 and 1860, to facilitate com- Ixii INTRODUCTION. parisons respecting tlie aggregate product of these cereals. In 1850 the United States, with a popula- tion of 23,191,876, exclusive of Indian tribes, produced 100,485,944 bushels of wheat, or 4.33 to each inhabitant; 14,188,813 bushels of rye. or 0.61 to each inhabitant; and 592,071,104 bushels of corn, or 25.53 to each inhabitant. In 1860, with a population, exclusive of Indian tribes, of 31,443,321, there were 173,104,924 bushels of wheat produced, or 5.50 to each inhabitant, showing an increase of one bushel and one- sixth to each inhabitant, or an increase, in proportion to population, of twenty-seven per cent. Of rye there were 21,101,380 bushels produced, or 0.67 to each inhabitant, showing an increase of 0.06 to each inhabitant, or an increase, in proportion to population, of about ten per cent. Of corn there were 838,792,740 bushels produced, or 26.73 to each inhabitant, showing an increase of 1.20 to each inhabitant, or an increase, in proportion to population, of 4.7 per cent. The aggregate product of wheat, rye, and corn produced in the United States in 1850 was 706,745,861 bushels, or 30.47 to each inhabitant. In 1860 the aggregate product of wheat, rye, and corn was 1,032,999,044 bushels, or 32.90 to each inhabitant; an increase, in proportion to population, of 7.97 per cent. The New England States, with a population of 2,728,116 in 1850, produced 1,090,894 bushels of wheat, or only thirteen quarts to each inhabitant. In 1860, with a population of 3,135,283, the New England States produced 1,083,193 bushels, or about eleven quarts and a half to each inhabitant, showing a decrease, in proportion to population, of 34.7 per cent. Of rye, the New England States produced in 1850 1,570,589 bushels, or 0.539 ta each inhabitant. In 1860 they produced 1,425,851 bushels, or 0.455 to each inhabitant, being a decrease, in pro- portion to population, of 18.46 per cent. The same States in 1850 produced 10,175,856 bushels of corn, or 3.73 to each inhabitant. In 1860 they produced 9,164,505 bushels of corn, or 2.92 to each inhabitant; a decrease, in proportion to population, of 27.74 per cent. The aggregate of wheat, rye, and corn produced in the New England States in 1850 was 12,837,339 bushels, or 4.73 to each inhabitant. In 1860 the aggregate of wheat, rye, and corn pro- duced was 11,673,549 bushels, or 3.72 to each inhabitant, showing a decrease, in proportion to popula- tion, of twenty-seven per cent. The middle States, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Maryland, in 1850, with a population of 6,573,301, produced 35,067,570 bushels of wheat, or 5.33 to each inhabitant. The same States, in 1860, with a population of 8,258,150, produced 30,502,909 bushels, or 3.69 to each inhabitant; a decrease, in proportion to population, of 44.4 per cent. Of rye, these States, in 1850, pro- duced 10,443,000 bushels, or 1.58 to each inhabitant. In 1860 the product was 12,247,300 bushels, or 1.48 to each inhabitant, being a decrease of 6.7 per cent, in proportion to population. Of corn there were produced in 1850 60,348,718 bushels, or 9.18 to each inhabitant. In 1860 there were produced 75,318,465 bushels, or 9.12 to each inhabitant ; a decrease, in proportion to population, of 0.65 per cent. The aggregate of wheat, rye, and corn produced in the middle States in 1850 was 105.859,288 bushels, or 16.1 to each inhabitant. In 1860 the aggregate product was 118,068,674 bushels, or 14.29 to each inhabitant; a decrease, in proportion to population, of 12.6 per cent. The western States, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Kentucky, Indiana, and Illinois, in 1850, with a population of 6,379,723, produced 46,076,318 bushels of wheat, or 7.22 to each inhabitant. The same States, in 1860, with apopulation of 10,2 18,722, produced 102,251,127 bushels, or 10 to each inhabitant; an increase, in proportion to population, of 38.5 per cent. Of rye, the product in 1850 was 1,254,580 bushels, or 0.196 to each inhabitant. In 1860 the product was 5,157,923 bushels, or 0.504 to each inhabitant; being an increase, in proportion to population, of 157 per cent. Of corn, the product in 1850 was 280,881,093 bushels, or 44 to each inhabitant. In 1860 the product was 468,708,017 bushels, or 45.86 to each inhabitant; an increase, in proportion to population, of 4 per cent. The aggregate of wheat, rye, and corn produced in 1850 was 328,211,991 bushels, or 51.4 to each mhabitant. In 1860 the aggregate was 576,117,067 bushels, or 56.36 to each inhabitant ; an increase, in proportion to population, of 9.63 per cent. INTRODUCTION. Ixiii The southern States — Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, and Texas — in 1850, with a population of 7,373,954, produced 17,791,761 bushels of wheat, or 2.42 to each inhabitant. In 1860 the same States, with a population of 8,975,124, produced 31,441,826 bushels, or 3.50 to each inhabitant; an increase, in proportion to population, of 44.6 per cent. In 1850 the product of rye was 914,819 bushels, or 0.12 to each inhabitant. In 1860 the quantity produced was 2,203,052 bushels, or 0.256 to each inhabitant; an increase, in pro- portion to population, of 113.3 per cent. The product of corn in 1850 was 240,209,743 bushels, or 32.68 to each inhabitant. In 1860 the product was 282,626,778 bushels, or 31.49 to each inhabitant; a decrease, in proportion to population, of 3.78 per cent. The aggregate of wheat, rye, and corn produced in 1850 was 258,916,323 bushels, or 35.2 to each inhabitant. In 1860 the aggregate was 316,271,656 bushels, or 35.24 to each inhabitant; the number of bushels to each inhabitant being the same as in 1850. Statistics of wheat, rye, and corn produced in the United States. 1850. 1860. i 1 s g 1 p -«■ .a a .S .■§ 'Sl i ° a i Grain. .2 ,13 1 O an jj ■3 C li CO a ■3 -g II 11 1 - if M UNITED STATES. Wheat ••- 100,485,944 14, 188, 813 592, 071, 104 4.33 .61 25.53 173,104,924 21, 101, 380 838,792,740 5.50 .67 26.73 72,618,980 6,912,567 246,721,636 1.17 .06 1.20 27 9.8 4.7 Kve Com - ........ ................ Total 706,745,861 30.47 1,032,999,044 32.90 326,253,183 2.43 7 97 NEW ENGLAND STATES. ■Wleat 1,090,894 1,570,589 10,175,856 4.65 .539 3.73 1,083,193 1,425,851 9, 164, 505 .345 .455 2.92 *7,701 *144,738 •1,011,351 *].20 ".084 *.8I *34 7 Eye - *18 46 *27 74 Total 12,837,339 4.73 11,673,549 3.72 *1, 163, 790 *1.01 *27 MIDDLE STATES. ■^^eat 35,067,570 10,443,000 60,348,718 5.33 1.58 9.18 30, 502, 909 12,247,300 75,318,465 3.69 1.48 9.12 *4, 564, 661 1,804,300 14,969,747 *1.64 *.]0 *.06 *44 4 Eye *6.7 * 65 Total 105,859,288 16.10 118, 068, 674 14.29 12,209,386 *1.80 *]2.G WESTERN STATES. Wheat 46, 076, 318 1,254,580 280,881,093 7.22 .196 44 102,251,127 5^157,923 468,708,017 10 .504 45.86 56,174,8Q9 3, 903, 343 187,826,924 2.78 .308 1.86 38 5 Eye .. - 157 Corn ........................... 4 Total 328,211,991 51.4 576,117,067 56.36 247,905,076 4.95 9 63 SOUTHERN STATES. Wheat 17,791,761 914, 819 240,209,743 2.42 .12 32.68 31,441,826 2, 203, 052 282,626,778 3.50 .256 31.49 13,650,065 1,288,233 42, 417, 035 1.08 .136 *1.19 44.6 Eye 113.3 *3.78 Total 258,916.323 35.2 316,271,656 35.24 57,355,333 • Oecrease. Ixiv INTRODUCTION, OATS. Bushels of oats produced in 1860. STATES. Alabama Arkansas California Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts . . Michigan Minnesota . Mississippi Missouri New Hampshire New Jersey New York North Carolina. Ohio Oregon BUSHELS. 1, 1, 1, 1, 15, 5, 5, 4, 2, 3, 1, 4, a, 3, 1. 4, 35, 2, 15, 682, 179 475, 268 043, 006 522,218 046,910 46, 899 231, 817 220, 029 317,831 887, 645 88, 325 617, 029 89, 377 988, 939 959, 298 180, 075 036, 980 176, 002 221, 235 680, 870 329, 233 539, 132 175, 134 781, 860 409, 234 885, 673 STATES. Pentisylyania Rhode Island South Carolina . . Tennessee Texas Vermont Virginia Wisconsin , Total, States TERRITORIES. District of Columbia Dakota Nebraska Nevada New Mexico Utah Washington Total, Territories , Aggregate , BUSHELS. 27, 387, 147 244, 453 936, 974 2, 267, 814 ■ 985, 889 3, 630, 267 10, 186, 720 11, 059, 260 172, 330, 722 29, 548 2,540 74, 502 1,082 7,246 63,211 134, 334 312,463 172, 643, 185 More oats than wheat is raised in the United States by over a million bushels. In 1860 there were 172,643,185 bushels of oats raised, against 146,584,179 bushels in 1850. The increase is by no means equal to the increase in population, and is far less than the increase in wheat and Indian corn. New York is the greatest bat-growing State in the Union, producing 35,175,134 bushels. Pennsylvania comes next, producing 27,387,147 bushels. Ohio stands third, producing 15,409,234 bushels. Illinois is fourth, producing 15,220,029 bushels. Wisconsin stands fifth, producing 11,059,270 bushels. Virginia comes next, producing 10,186,720 bushels. The four States of New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Illinois, produce more oats than all the other States and Territories. The New England States produced 10,766,523 bushels in 1860, against 8,101,268 in 1850, as follows : I860. 1S50. Maine 2, 988, 939 2, 181, 037 New Hampshire. 1, 339, 233 973^ 331 Vermont 3, 630,267 2,307,734 Massachusetts 1, I80, 075 1, 165, 146 Rhode Island 234, 453 215, 232 Connecticut 1,522,218 1,258,738 10,886,185 8,101,268 INTRODUCTION. Ixv Vermont is the largest oat-producing State in New England, Maine coming next. Both the&e States fell off in the production of Indian corn in 1860 as compared with 1850; but the oat crop has materially increased. In none of the New England States has there been any falling off in the production of oats, while in the aggregate there has been an increase of over 25 per cent. In the middle States, the oat crop has increased from 54,323,836 bushels in 1850, to 72,137,170 bushels in 1860, as follows : I860 1850. New York 35, 175, 133 26, 552, 814 New Jersey 4, 539, 132 3, S78, 063 Maryland 3, 959, 298 2, 242, 151 Pennsylvania 27, 387, 149 21, 538, 156 Delaware 1, 046, 910 604, 518 District of Columbia 29, 548 8, 134 72, 137, 170 54, 323, 836 There is no falling off in any of the middle States. The increase from 1850 to 1860, in the aggre- gate, is over 25 per cent. In 1860, as compared with 1850, the production of wheat in the middle States, as we have before remarked, fell off nearly five millions of bushels. On the other hand, the crop of Indian corn increased in the same period nearly fourteen millions of bushels ; and, as will be seen from the above table, the crop of oats also increased in the same period nearly eighteen millions of bushels. In other words, while we lose five million bushels of wheat, we gain nearly thirty-two million -bushels of Indian corn and oats. The decrease in the production of wheat, caused by the midge, is not an unmixed evil — the land has been devoted to other crops. The following table shows the amount of oats raised in the western States in 1860 and 1850 : I860. . , 1850. Illinois 15,220,029 10,087,241 Indiana 5, 317, 381 5, 665, 014 Iowa 5, 887, 645 1, 524, 345 Kansas 88, 325 Kentucky 4, 617, 029 8, 201, 311 Michigan 4, 036, 980 2, 866, 056 Minnesota 2, 176, 002 30, 582 Missouri '. - - ...... -■- - 3, 680, 870 6, 278, 079 Ohio 15,409,234 . 13,472,742 Wisconsin 11, 059, 260 3, 414, 672 Nebraska 74, 502 67, 567, 257 48, 530, 042 Ohio produces more oats than any other western State. Illinois produces nearly as much, and shows a much greater increase than Ohio since 1850. Wisconsin comes next. The production of oats in this State has increased from less than three and a half million bushels in 1850 to over eleven million bushels in 1860. The three States of Ohio, Illinois, and Wisconsin produce over 62 per cent, of all the oats raised in the western States. In round numbers these three States produce forty-two million bushels of oats, while all the other western States produce only twenty-five million bushels. In the production of oats, as in other crops, Minnesota shows a rapid increase. In 1860 she pro- duced over two million bushels of oats against thirty thousand bushels in 1850. Iowa, Wisconsin, and Michigan show a marked increase in the yield of oats. Indiana, on the other hand, has slightly de- creased. Kentucky has fallen off nearly one-half Missouri also shows a marked decrease in the oat crop, falling off from five million bushels in 1850 to three and a half million bushels in 1860. 9 Ixvi INTRODUCTION. On the whole, the western States do not show as great an increase in the production of oats as of Indian corn or wheat. The most remarkable decrease in the oat crop, however, is in the southern States. This will be seen from the following table, showing the production of oats in the difierent southern States in 1860 and 1850 : I860. 1850. Alabama 682, 179 2, 965, 696 Arkansas 475, 268 656, 183 Florida 46, 899 66, 586 Georgia 1, 231, 817 3, 820, 044 Louisiana - 89, 377 89, 637 Mississippi ' 221, 235 1. 503, 288 North Carolina 2, 781, 860 4, 052, 078 South Carolina 936,974 2,322, 155 Tennessee 2, 267, 814 7, 703, 086 Texas 985, 889 199, 017 Virginia 10, 186, 720 10, 179, 144 19, 906, 032 33, 566, 913 "With the exception of Texas and Virginia, the oat crop has fallen off in every southern State. The crop in Alabama fell off from nearly three million bushels in 1850 to less than three-quarters of a million in 1860. Mississippi falls off from one and a half million to two hundred and twenty thousand, and other States, as will be seen from the table, also fall off to an equal extent. This rapid decrease in the production of oats in the slave States is 'quite curious. In the table showing the amount of oats raised in the western States it will be observed that Kentucky and Wis- consin showed a marked falling off in the production of oats. It is probable, however, that the system of labor there adopted, has less to do with the fact than the nature of the climate. Oats are essentially a northern crop; and, while they flourish well in the southwest, it is doubtless found that other crops which do not thrive so well in a more northern latitude can be raised south with greater profit. The following table shows the production of oats in the Pacific States : I860. ]850. California 1, 043, 006 Oregon 885, 673 61, 214 New Mexico 7, 246 5 Washington 134, 334 Utah 63, 211 10, 900 2, 133, 420 72, 119 California, which was unreported in 1850, produces over a million bushels in 1860. Oregon also has increased to an almost equal extent. The following table shows the production of oats in the different sections of the country in 1850 and in 1860 in proportion to population: I860. 1850. New England States 3.43 2.95 Middle States 8.65 8.20 Western States 6.51 7.59 Southern States 2.18 4.46 Pacific States 4.00 0.40 United States 5.49 6.33 INTRODUCTION. Ixvii The New England States produced about the same quantity of oats as of Indian corn ; but, while there has been a falling off in the production of Indian corn, in proportion to population, between 1850 and 1860, the production of oats has increased about half a bushel to each inhabitant, or from 2.95 bushels in 1850 to 3.43 bushels in 1860. The middle States raise more oats, in proportion to population, than any other section. In the production of wheat there has been a great falling off from 1850 to 1860, and in Indian corn there was a slight decline in proportion to population ; but the oat crop has increased more than enough to make up for the deficiency in the corn crop, though by no means sufficient, in proportion to population, to make up for the decrease in the yield of wheat. In 1860 the middle States produced about nine bushels of Indian corn to each person, and a little over eight and one-half bushels of oats. The western States, which produce over 45 bushels of Indian corn, produce only six and one-half bushels of oats to each inhabitant. The increase in the production of oats in the western States does not keep pace with the increase in population. In 1860, as compared with 1850, there is a falling off of over one bushel of oats to each person. The southern States produced nearly four and one-half bushels of oats to each person in 1850, and only a fraction over two bushels in 1860. The Pacific States, in 1860, produced four bushels of oats to each person. Taking the country as a whole, the production of oats has not kept pace with the increase in popu- lation. In 1850 we produced six and three-tenths bushels to each person, and in 1860 less than five and one-half bushels. THE CULTURE OF OATS. This grain, while paying well for good cultivation, can be raised with less labor than any other cereal crop, and will thrive on a great variety of soils. Where extra care is taken in preparing and enriching the land, the best and heaviest oats are produced on a clayey loam ; but, as a general rule, in this country, oats are raised on low, moist, rather mucky soils. Unlike barley, they succeed on sod-land. They are frequently sown on new, moist land, that would otherwise be planted with Indian corn. They require less labor in planting and cultivating than corn, and are sown to a considerable extent on this account. In New York and Pennsylvania, which produce more than one-third of all the oats raised in the United States and Territories, oats are frequently sown on land intended for wheat, taking the place formerly occupied by a summer fallow. Where the land is rich enough, good wheat is often obtained after oats ; but, as a general rule, the oats are obtained at the expense of the succeeding wheat crop. Ixviii INTRODUCTION. BARLEY. Busliels of barley produced in 1860. STATES. BUSHELS. STATES. BUSHELS. Alabama , Arkansas California Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts . . Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri New Hampshire New Jersey . New Yoili North Carolina . Ohio Oregon 15, 135 3,158 4, 415, 426 20, 813 3,646 8,369 14, 682 1, 036, 338 382, 245 467, 103 4,716 270, 685 224 802, 108 17, 350 134, 891 307, 868 109, 668 1,875 228, 502 121, 103 24, 915 4, 186, 668 3,445 1, 663, 868 26, 254 Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina . . Tennessee Texas Vermont Virginia Wisconsin Total, States TERRITORIES. District of Columbia. Dakota Nebraska Nevada ,. . New Mexico Utah , Washington Total, Territories . Aggregate. 530, 714 40, 993 11,490 25, 144 67, 562 79,211 68, 846 707, 307 15, 802, 322 175 1,108 1,597 6,099 9,976 4,621 23, 576 15, 825, 898 The climate of the United States is not as well adapted to the production of barley as of wheat. Barley delights in a moist climate and an extended growing season. It is for this reason that English barley is superior to that of any other country. While we can raise wheat of a quality superior to that of England, our best barley would not be used by a London maltster. Barley is now used in this country principally for beer-making purposes. With the rapid increase in our foreign population there is yearly an increased demand for barley, and the price has advanced much more than that of any other of our ordinary grain crops. Weight for weight, barley of late years has brought a higher price than wheat, and, where the soil and climate are well suited to its production, there are few crops more profitable. In favorable circumstances it is believed that three bushels of barley can be raised with as little expense as two bushels of wheat. Barley, of all ordinary crops, however, requires good culture. It is only on well-drained and highly cultivated farms that we can depend for raising good crops. As compared with Indian corn, wheat, and oats, barley occupies a very subordinate position in American agriculture. In 1860 the total crop of the States and Territories was 15,825,898 bushels; while, in round numbers, there were 838,000,000 bushels of Indian corn, 173,000,000 bushels of wheat, and 172,000,000 bushels of oats. As compared with 1850, however, the increase in the pro- duction of barley has been greater than in any of these crops. In round numbers, the barley crop in 1850 was 5,000,000 bushels, and in 1860 15,000,000 bushels, or an increase of 200 per cent. This is INTRODUCTION. Ixix due principally, as before remarked, to the increased demand for barley for malting purposes, and the high price which, relatively to other crops, and to the expense of its cultivation, it commands in market. The following table shows the amount of barley raised in the New England States in 1860 as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Connecticut : 20, 813 19, 099 Massachusetts 134, S91 112, 385 Vermont 79, 211 42, 150 Rhode Island 40, 993 18, 875 New Hampshire 121, 103 70, 256 Maine 802, 108 151, 731 1, 199, 119 414, 496 It will be seen that the crop has increased in every one of the New England States. In the ag- gregate there was nearly three times as much raised in 1860 as in 1850. The greatest increase is in Maine. More than five times as much was raised in this State in 1860 as in 1850. The following table shows the amount of barley raised in the middle States in 1860 as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. New York 4,186,667 3,585,059 Pennsylvania 530, 716 165, 584 New Jersey 24, 915 6, 492 Delaware 3, 646 56 Maryland * 17, 350 745 District of Columbia 175 75 4,753,469 3,758,011 The production of barley in each of the middle States has increased since 1850; but the increase is by no means equal to that in the New England States. New York produces over 85 per cent, of all the barley raised in the middle States. The increased per cent., however, in this State has been far less than in the other States. This, however, is due to the fact that, as compared with other States, her barley crop was so large in 1850. She produced over half a million bushels more barley in 1860 than in 1860, which is nearly as much as the total crop in the other middle States. Pennsylvania, which raised thirteen .million bushels of wheat in 1860, while New York raised only eight and a half million bushels, and twenty-eight million bushels of Indian corn to twenty million bushels in New York, produces only a little more than half a million bushels of barley, while New York produces over four million bushels. The following table shows the amount of barley raised in the western States in 1860 as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Illinois 1,036,338 110,795 Indiana 382, 245 45, 483 Iowa 467, 103 25, 093 Kansas 4, 716 Kentucky 270, 685 95, 343 Michigan 307, 868 75, 249 Minnesota -.--.. 109, 668 1, 216 Missouri S28, 502 9, 631 Ohio 1. 663, 868 354, 358 Nebraska 1 > If^S 4,472,101 717,168 Ixx INTRODUCTION. "Western States, inclush-e, produce but little more barley than the State of New York alone. Ohio produces more barley than any other western State. Illinois comes next. These two States produce about one million bushels more barley than all the other western States. Though the aggregate production of barley in the western States is so small, the increase since 1850 has been very great. The crop of Illinois has increased eight hundred and fifty per cent. Iowa even more, or about eighteen hundred per cent. Missouri has increased still more rapidly, or nearly two thousand three hundred per cent. The following table shows the amount of barley raised in the southern States in 1860 as com- pared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Alabama 15, 135 2, 958 Arkansas 3, 158 177 Florida 8, 369 Georgia 14, 682 11, 501 Louisiana 224 Mississippi 1,875 228 North Carolina , 3, 445 2, 735 South Carolina 11, 490 4, 583 Tennessee 25,144 2,737 Texas 67, 562 4, 776 Virginia 68, 846 25, 437 219, 930 56, 132 The production of barley in the southern States is quite small The single State of Maine alone produces four times as much, barley as all the southern States. The increase, however, since 1850, is very decided, or over three hundred per cent. Virginia produces nearly one-third of all the barley raised in the southern States. Texas, Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama, and South Carolina are the principal southern barley-growing States; but even in these States the crop is very small. The following table shows the amount of barley raised in the Pacific States in 1860 as compared with 1850: I860. 1850. California 4, 415, 426 9, 712 Oregon 26,254 New Mexico 6, 099 5 Washington 4, 621 Utah 9, 976 1, 799 4,462,376 11,516 California' produces nearly all the barley raised in the Pacific States. It is a noteworthy fact, that this young State produces more barley than any other State in the Union. California and New York produce more barley than all the other States and Territories included. The following table shows the amount of barley raised in different sections of the United States in 1860 and 1850, in proportion to the population : I860. 1850. New England States 0.38 0.15 Middle States 0.54 0.56 Western States 0.43 0.11 Southern States 0.02 0.001 Pacific States 7.88 0.05 United States and Territories 0.40 0.22 INTRODUCTION. Ixxi It will be seen that the production of barley in all the States more than keeps up with ihe in- crease in population. In fact the amount of barley raised to each person in 1860 was nearly twice as much as in 1850. It was more than double in the New England States ; nearly four times as great in the western States, and about fifteen times as great in the Pacific States. In the middle States alone, has the increase in the crop fallen below the increase in population. CULTURE OP BARLEY. As before remarked, barley requires good cultivation. It delights in a warm, active, fertile soil. It does not do well on sod-land. In England it is usually sown on light, sandy soils, after a crop of turnips that have been eaten on the land by sheep. The droppings of the sheep enrich the land, while the small feet of the sheep consolidate the light, porous soil. In this counti-y barley appears to flourish on heavier soils, especially if they are thoroughly pulverized. At all events the soil must be well drained and the crop sown in good season in the spring. Our season is so short, and the roots of barley ex- tend, as compared with winter wheat, over such a small surface, that it is exceedingly important that the soil contain a liberal supply of plant-food in an active condition. "Winter barley is grown to a considerable extent in the southwestern States, and its cultivation is rapidly increasing in western New York, where it takes the place, to a certain extent, of winter wheat. "Winter barley is heavier than spring barley, and commands a higher price. It is sown at the same time as winter wheat, and requires the same cultivation. BUCKWHEAT. Bushels of buckwheat produced in 1860. STATES. Alabama Arkansas California. . , Connecticut . Delaware . . . Florida Georgia Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts ■ . . Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri New Hampshire . New Jersey New York North Carolina. . Ohio Oregon BUSHELS. 1„ 347 509 76, 887 309, 107 . 16,355 2,023 324, 117 396, 989 215, 705 41, 575 18, 928 160 239, 519 212, 338 123, 202 529, 916 28, 052 J, 699 182, 292 89,996, 877, 386 5, 126, 307 35, 924 2, 370, 650 2,7Af STATES Pennsylvania Eihode Island South Carolina . . . Tennessee Texas Vermont Virginia Wisconsin Total, States TERRITORIES. District of Columbia. Dakota Nebraska Nevada New Mexico , Utah , Washington Total, Territories. _-/ Aggregate BUSHELS. 5.572,024 3,573 602 14,481 1,349 225, 415 478, 090 38, 987 17, 558, 253 445 115 12, 224 6 68 707 13, 565 17,571,818 Ixxii INTRODUCTION. Buckwheat is an important crop in many sections of the United States. It has properties which render it pecuHarly well suited to take the place it occupies among our grain crops. It is not botani- cally a cereal, but it affords a highly nutritious grain, which is used to a considerable extent as food for man and animals. It can be sown later in the season than any other grain-crop. In favorable sea- sons, and on good soil, the yield is very large. It is so rampant a grower that it smothers out weeds, and is frequently sown for this purpose. It is also grown as a green-crop for ploughing under as manure. Being sown so late in the season, it can be grown on land that is too wet for other crops. On the other hand, it succeeds well on rough, hilly land, where almost any other crop would perish. The total production of buckwheat in the United States and Territories in 1840 was 7,291,743 bushels, in 1850 8,956,912 bushels, and in 1860 17,571,818 bushels. The crop of 1860 was nearly double what it was in 1850, showing a larger increase than any other grain-crop. The following table shows the amount of buckwheat raised in the New England States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : Connecticut Maine Massachusetts New Hampshire Bhode Island Vermont .^ There is a large increase in the crop of buckwheat in the New England States in 1860, as com- pared with 1850; but the crop of 1850 was less than in 1840, being 778,084 bushels in 1840, against 716,044 bushels in 1860. The largest increase is in Maine. The crop of buckwheat in this State in 1840 was 51,543 bush- els-, in 1850 104,523 bushels, and in 1860 330,519 bushels. Connecticut raised 303,043 bushels of buckwheat in 1840, 229,297 bushels in 1850, and 309,107 bushels in 1860. These fluctuations in the produce of buckwheat are doubtless caused by the season, as this crop is more dependent on the weather than any other. The following table shows the amount of buckwheat raised in the middle States in 1360, as com- pared with 1850 : I860. 185ft_-- — ^ New York 5, 126, 307 3, }^, 955 New Jersey 817,386 ^^878,934 Pennsylvania 5, 572, 024 ^ 2, 193, 692 Maryland 212,33^ 103,671 Delaware 16,;^55 8,615 District of Columbia / U5 378 _y' 1860. 1850. 309, 107 229, 297 339, 519 104, 523 123,202 105,895 89, 996 65, 265 3,573 1,245 225, 415 209, 819 1, 090, 812 716, 044 X ^ 744, 855 6, 369, 245 In Pennsylvania and New York buckwheat is an important crop, and the above figures show that its cultivation is rapidly increasing. The crop has nejlrly doubled in these States since 1850. The grain is used extensively as food for sheep in winter, and there are few crops which for the labor attending it afford a better profit. The following table shows the amount of buckwheat raised in the western States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : INTRODUCTION. Ixxiii I860. 1850. ^'^^° 2. 370, 650 638, 060 ^°^'^°» 390,989 149,740 ^^•^^'ga^ 529,916 472,917 ^l^''^"'^ 324,117 184,504 ^^^^onsin 38^987 79^ gyg Minnesota 28,052 515 ^°"^* ...,,...., , 215,705 52,516 ^is^oii" 182,292 23,641 Kentucky ,,.,., , 18,928 16,097 I^ansas 41 575 Nebraska 12 224 4, 159, 435 1, 617, 864 It will be seen that Ohio raises more buckwheat than all the other western States, and that the crop has rapidly increased since 1850. Michigan raises the next largest crop of buckwheat, though but little more than one quarter of the amount raised in Ohio. Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, and Missouri are evidently giving some attention to buckwheat, but it is a very subordinate crop in these great corn-growing States. The following table shows the amount of buckwheat raised in the southern States in 1860 as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. "^"■gjnia 478, 090 214, 898 North Carolina 35,924 16,704 South Carolina 602 283 Georgia 2, 023 250 Alabama 1, 347 343 Louisiana 160 3 Texas 1 349 59 Mississippi 1, 699 1,121 Arkansas 509 175 Tennessee 14,481 19,427 Florida 55 536, 184 253, 323 The crop of buckwheat has more than doubled in the southern States since 1850. It is, however, a very small crop in the south. Virginia produces eight times as much as all the other southern States together. It is probable that the bulk of the crop is raised in western Virginia, where the agriculture assimilates closely to that of Pennsylvania and Ohio. The following table shows the amount of buckwheat raised in the Pacific States in 1860, as com- pared with 1850: I860. 1850. California 76, 887 Oregon 2, 749 New Mexico 6 100 Washington 707 Utah 68 332 80, 417 432 10 Ixxiv INTRODUCTION. In buckwheat, as in every other agricultural product, California shows rapid progress. It is clear, however, that this crop receives but little attention on the Pacific coast." ' The following table shows the amount of buckwheat raised in the different sections of the United States in proportion to population ; 1860. 1850. New England States .,,^.... 0.35 0.26 Middle States , . ^ ^ . ^ 1.41 0.96 Western States 0.41 0.25 Southern States 0.09 0.03 Pacific States 0.14 0.002 Whole United States and Territories 0.56 0.38 Buckwheat is one of the few crops that increases more rapidly in the United States than the pop- ulation. In 1850 we raised in the whole United States and Territories about twelve quarts to each person, and in 1860 a little over half a bushel. The middle States in 1850 raised nearly a bushel of buckwheat to each inhabitant, and in 1860 nearly a bushel and a half to each person. The western States raise less than half a bushel to each person, and New England seven-twen- tieths of a bushel. The southern States raise only nine hundredths of a bushel to each inhabitant. PEAS AND BEANS. Bushels of peas and beans produced in 1860. STATES. Alabama Arkansas California Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts . . Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri New Hampshire. NcvT Jersey New York North Carolina. . Ohio Oregoa BUSHELS. 1, 482, 036 440, 472 165, 574 25, 864 7,438 363, 217 1,765,214 108, 028 79, 902 41, 081 9,827 288, 346 431, 148 246, 915 34, 407 45, 246 165, 128 18, 988 1, 954, 666 107, 999 79, 454. 27, 674 1,609,339 1, 932, 204 102,511 34, 407 STATES. BUSHELS. Pennsylvania Ehode Island South Carolina . . Tennessee Texas Vermont Virginia Wisconsin Total, States TERRITORIES. District of Columbia Dakota Nebraska Nevada New Mexico Utah Washington Total, Territories Aggregate 123, 090 7,698 1, 728, 074 547, 803 341, 961 70, 654 515, 168 99, 484 15, 001, 017 3,749 286 5,029 15 38, 514 2, 535 10, 850 60, 978 15, 001, 995 INTRODUCTION. Ixxv In 1850 there were raised in the United States 9,219,901 bushels of peas and- beans. The amount was not given in the census of 1840. In 1860 there were raised 15,061,995 bushels, showing an increase of over 50 per cent. Had the crops been returned separately it would have been more interesting. Though belonging to the same botanical ordfer, {Leguminosce,) and of quite similar chemical composition, the crops are raised practically for very diiferent objects. Beans are grown principally as food for man, while the pea is cultivated principally as food for animals on the farms, or for ploughing under as a green crop for manure. With the exception of flax-seed and decorticated cotton-seed, peas and beans contain more nitrogen than any other grain. The droppings of animals fed on peas and beans are consequently more valuable than that from animals fed on any other grain. The growth of these crops when fed out on the farm increases its fertility more than any other grain crop. When consumed on the farm, and the manure returned to the land, or when ploughed under as a manure, peas may be considered as a renovating crop. As a crop to alternate with wheat, peas are exceedingly useful. They tax the soil but lightly, and when a heavy crop is produced they smother the weeds. They also ripen early enough to aflford ample time to sow wheat after the peas are harvested. To a certain extent these remarks are applicable to beans. Their cultivation is rapidly extending in the wheat-growing districts. They can be planted late in the season, and yet can be harvested in time to allow the land to be sown to wheat. Being planted in rows, the land can be horsehoed and the soil gleaned and pulverized almost as well as if summer-fallowed. The following table shows the amount of peas and beans raised in the New England States in 1860 as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Connecticut 25, 864 19, 090 Maine 24^,915 205,541 Massachusetts 45,246 43,709 New Hampshire 79,464 70,856 Rhode Island 7, 698 6, 846 Vermont - 70, 654 104, 649 475, 831 450, 69J Except in Vermont, the crop of peas and beans has increased in all the New England States since 1850. Maine raises more peas and beans than all the other New England States; The total of these two crops in New England is less than half a million bushels. The following table shows the amount of peas and beans raised in the middle States in 1860 as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. New York 1,609,339 741,546 New Jersey 27,674 14,174 Pennsylvania 123,090 55,231 Maryland -■■ 34,407 12,816 Delaware 7,438 4,120 Districtof Columbia 3,749 7,754 1, 805, 697 835, 641 New York raises eight-ninths of all the peas and beans produced in the middle States. The crop in this State has more than doubled since 1850. Ixxvi INTRODUCTION. The following table shows the amount of peas and beans raised in the western States in 1860 as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Ohio : 102,511 60,168 Indiana 79, 902 35, 773 Michigan 165, 128 74, 254 Illinois 108,028 ' 82,814 Wisconsin 99, 484 20, 657 Iowa 41,081 4,775 Missouri 107,999 46,017 Kentucky 288, 346 202, 574 Minnesota 18, 988 10, 002 Kansas - 9,827 Nebraska 5, 029 1, 026, 323 537, 434 It will be observed that the whole western States do not produce as much peas and beans as the State of New York alone. Kentucky produces more than any other western State. Michigan comes next, and then Illinois, Missouri, and Ohio. But these crops are not raised to any considerable extent in the west. During the present year (1864) the west has barely been able to supply the home demand for beans, and, to some extent at least, has imported them from the middle States and Canada. The following table shows the amount of peas and beans raised in the southern States in 1860 as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Virginia 515, 168 521, 579 North Carolina 1, 932, 204 1, 584, 252 South Carolina 1, 728, 074 1, 026, 900 Gfeorgia 1, 765, 214^ 1, 142, Oil Alabama 1, 482, 036 892, 701 Louisiana 431, 148 161, 732 Texas 341, 961 179, 350 Mississippi 1, 954, 666 1, 072, 757 Arkansas 440,472 285, 738 Tennessee 547, 803 369, 321 Florida 363, 217 135, 359 11,501,963 7,371,700 The States and Territories raised about 9,000,000 bushels of peas and beans in 1850. Of these the southern States raised over 7,000,000 bushels. In 1860 the States and Territories raised about 15,000,000 bushels, and of these the southern States raised over il,500,000 bushels. As before said, we have no means of knowing how much of this quantity is peas and how much beans. In the northern States the proportion of beans is undoubtedly larger than in the southern States. The so-called "cow pea " of the south is more closely allied to the bean than to the pea family. It is, however, a most valuable plant in a climate sufficiently warm to mature it. It has done much for southern agriculture. Like all the leguminous plants, it contains a high percentage of nitrogen ; and, when ploughed under as manure, or consumed on the farm by stock, it adds greatly to the fertility of the soil. It is the great renovating crop of the southern States. To a certain extent it is to the south what red clover is to the north. Within the past thirty years its cultivation has been greatly extended both as a green crop for ploughing under as manure and as a grain crop. Its importance in southern agriculture can hardly be overestimated. The great want of American agriculture is a plant which INTRODUCTION. kxvii sl>all occupy in our system of rotation the place which the turnip occupies in British agriculture. We have no such crop. The bean at the north has more of the necessary quaUties than any other plant extensively cultivated. It is planted in rows, and admits the use of the horsehoe in cleaning the land. It does not draw heavily on the soil, and contains a large amount of nitrogen, the element which the cereals so much need. The "cow pea" has these qualities in a still greater degree. In the southern States it grows much more luxuriantly than the bean or the common pea at the north, and is the best plant that is extensively grown in southern agriculture for enriching the land. The cow pea. does not flourish north of Virginia, and even in that State some of the best varieties do not succeed as well as in the more southern States. It will be seen from the above table that North and South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi raise the greatest amount of this crop. In Virginia the plant is grown extensively, but probably the larger proportion of it is ploughed under for manure. ... The following table shows the amount of peas and beans raised in the Pacific States in 1860 as compared with 1850 : - I860. 1850. California 165, 574 2, 292 Oregon. 34, 407 6, 566 New Mexico 38, 514 15, 688 Washingtou 10, 850 . Utah 2, 535 289 251,880 24,835 The cultivation of this crop is rapidly extending in the Pacific States. As will be seen from the following table, they increase four times as rapidly as the population. The following table shows the amount of peas and beans raised in the different sections in 1860 and 1850, and in the whole United States and Territories in proportion to population : I860. 1850. New England States 0.15 0.12 Middle States 0.21 0.12 Western States 0.10 0.13 Southern States 1.26 • 0.97 Pacific States 0.44 ■ 0.13 United States and Territories 0.48 0.35 It will be seen that the increase in the production of peas and beans in all the States and Terri- tories more than keeps up with the increase in population. It was eleven quarts to each inhabitant in 1850, and a little over fifteen quarts to each person in 1860. In the New England States there were three and three-quarters quarts of peas and beans to each inhabitant in 1850, and four and three-qiiarters quarts in 1860. In the middle States there were three and three-quarters quarts in 1850, and seven quarts in 1860. In the western States there were four quarts in 1850, and only three quarts in i860, showing a (^crease in the production of peas and beans of 25 per cent, in proportion to population. In the southern States there were nearly a bushel of peas and beans to each person in 1850, and over a bushel and a peck in 1860. It will be observed that there is a decided increase in the production of these crops in all the different sections except at 1 he west. The farmers on the rich land of this section have not yet realized Ixxviii INTRODUCTION. the necessity of raising peas and beans as renovating crops, while viewed merely as grain crops, it is doubtless found that the cereal grains are more profitable. IRISH POTATOES Bushels of Irish ^potatoes produced in 1860. STATES. Alabama Arkansas ...... . California Connecticut Delaware Florida Geqrgia Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana '. .. , Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri New Hampshire. New Jersey New York North Carolina . . Ohio Oregon BUSHELS. 491,646 418, 010 1, 789, 463 1, 833, 148 377, 931 18, 766 303, 789 5, 540, 390 3, 866, 647 2, 806; 720 296, 335 1, 756, 531 294, 655 6,374,617 1, 264, 429 3,201,901 5, 261, 245 2, 565, 485 414, 320 1, 990, 860 4, 137, 543 4, 171, 690 26, 447, 394 830, 565 8, 695, 101 303, 319 STATES. Pennsylvania . . Rhode Island . . South Carolina. Tennessee Texas Vermont Virginia Wisconsin Total, States. TERRITORIES. District of Columbia. Dakota Nebraska Nevada New Mexico Utah Washington Total, Territories. Aggregate . BUSHELS. 11, 687, 467 542, 909 226, 735 1, 182, 005 174, 182 5, 253, 498 2, 292, 398 3, 818, 309 110, 629, 993 31, 693 9,489 162, 188 5,686 6,223 141,001 163. 594 518, 874 111, 148, 867 There were raised in the States and Territories in 1850, 65,797,896 bushels of Irish potatoes ; and in 1860, 111,148,867 bushels. The following table shows the amount of Irish potatoes raised in the New England States in 1860 as compared with 1850: I860. Connecticut 1, 833, 148 Maine 6, 374, 617 Massachusetts 3, 201, 901 New Hampshire 4, 137, 543 Rhode Island 542, 909 Vermont 5, 253, 498 Total 21,343,616 1850. 2, 689, 725 3, 436, 040 3, 585, 384 4, 304, 919 651, 029 4,951,014 19,618,111 In Connecticut there is a great falling oif in the production of this crop, while in Maine the crop has nearly doubled since 1850. There is a slight falling off in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island. ( INTRODUCTION. Ixxix Taking the New England States as a whole, the crop has increased trora 19,618,111 bushels in 1850 to 21,343,616 bushels in 1860. The following table shows the amount of Irish potatoes raised in the middle States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. New York 26, 447, 394 15, 398, 368 Pennsylvania 11, 687, 467 5, 980, 732 New Jersey , 4, 171, 690 3, 207, 236 Delaware , 377, 931 240, 542 Maryland ... 1, 264, 429 764, 939 District of Columbia .... .... 31,693 28,292 Total : . 43, 980, 604 25, 620, 109 The production of Irish potatoes has increased somewhat in all the middle States since 1850 ; but it is only in New York, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey that there is any marked increase. In New York the crop has risen from fifteen million bushels in 1850 to twenty-six million bushels in 1860; and in Pennsylvania the crop has increased from less than six million bushels in 1850 to over eleven and a half million bushels in 1860. Taking the middle States as a whole, the crop of Irish potatoes has increased from about twenty- five and a half million bushels in 1850 to nearly forty-four million bushels in 1860. The following table shows the quantity of Irish potatoes raised in the western States in 1860 as compared with 1850: I860. 1850. Ohio 8, 695, 101 5, 057, 769 Indiana : 3, 866, 647 2, 083, 337 Michigan . 5, 261, 245 2, 359, 897 Illinois 5,540,390 2,514,861 Wisconsin 3, 818, 309 1, 402, 077 Minnesota 2,565,485 21,145 Iowa 2, 806, 720 276, 120 Missouri 1, 990, 850 939, 006 Kentucky 1, 756, 531 1, 492, 487 Kansas 296, 335 . Nebraska , , 162, 188 Total 36, 759, 801 16, 146, 699 Minnesota and Iowa show an enormous increase in the production of Irish potatoes since 1850, while all the western States show a decided gain in amount. The crop has increased from b little over sixteen million bushels in 1850, to thirty-six and three quarter million bushels in 1860. The following table shows the amount of Irish potatoes raised in the southern States in I860 as compared with 1850: I860. 1850. Virginia 2, 292, 398 1, 316, 933 North Carolina 830, 565 620, 318 South Carolina 226, 735 136, 494 Georgia 303, 789 227, 379 Alabama 491, 646 240, 001 Louisiana 294, 655 95, 632 Texas 174, 182 94, 645 Mississippi 414, 320 261, 482 Arkansas 418, 010 193, 832 Tennessee 1, 182, 005 1, 067, 844 Florida 18,766 7,828 Total 6, 647, 071 4, 268, 38S Ixxx INTRODUCTION. The State of Maine raises nearly as many Irish potatoes as all the southern States. Virginia and Tennessee raise more Irish potatoes than the other southern States combined. The crop decreases as we go south, while the sweet potato takes its place. The following table shows the amount of Irish potatoes raised in the Pacific States in 1860 as compared with 1850: I860. 1850. California 1, 789, 463 9, 292 Oregon ; 303,319 91,326 New Mexico 6, 223 3 Washington 163, 594 Utah 141, 067 43, 968 Total 2, 402, 600 144, 589 The following table shows the quantity of Irish potatoes raised in the different sections of the United States in proportion to population : I860. 1850. New England States 6.80 7.19 Middle States 5.28 3.88 Western States 3.58 2.66 Southern States 0.73 0.58 Pacific States 4.15 0.80 United States and Territories 3.53 2.83 It will be seen that New England raises more Irish potatoes in proportion to population than any other section. There is, however, a slight decrease in the crop in proportion to population since 1850, being a little over seven bushels to each person in 1850, and six and three-fourth bushels to each person in 1860. In the middle States the crop has increased from three and three-fourth bushels in 1850 to five and one-fourth bushels in 1860, to each inhabitant. In the western States the quantity of potatoes raised in proportion to population is far less than , in the New England and middle States. In 1850 there were raised about two and a half bushels to each person, and in 1860 three and a half bushels. In the Pacific States the production of Irish potatoes, in proportion to population, has increased enormously. In 1850 only about three-fourth bushel of potatoes were raised to each inhabitant ; while in 1860 the crop exceeded four bushels to each person. The whole United States and Territories raised about two and three-quarter bushels of potatoes to each inhabitant in 1850 and three and a half bushels in 1860. Minnesota raises more potatoes, in proportion to population, than any other State in the Union. In 1850 she raised nearly four bushels to each person, and in I860 nearly fifteen bushels. Maine also raises a large crop of potatoes, in proportion to population. In 1850 she produced nearly six bushels to each person, and in 1860 over ten bushels. INTRODUCTION. Ixxxi SWEET POTATOES. of sweet potatoes produced in the United States in 1860. STATES. Alabama Arkansas California . . . Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts .. Michigan Minnesota . . . . . Mississippi . Missouri New Hampshire New Jersey New York . North Carolina . Ohio BDSHELS. 5, 439, 917 1, 566, 540 214, 307 2,710 142, 213 1, 129, 759 6, 508, 541 306,154 299, 516 51,362 9,965 1, 057, 557 2, 060, 981 1,435 236, 740 616 38, 492 792 4, 563, 873 335, 102 161 1, 034, 832 7,529 6, 140, 039 304, 445 STATES. Oregon Pennsylvania . . Bhode Island . . South Carolina Tennessee Texas Vermont Virginia Wisconsin Total, States TEIiRITORIES. District of Columbia , Dakota . Nebraska Nevada New Mexico Utah Washington Total, Territories. Aggregate BUSHELS. 335 103, 187 946 4, 115, 688 2, 604, 672 1, 846, 612 623 1,960,817 2,396 42, 088, 854 5,606 168 200 180 18 6,172 42,095,026 The crop of sweet potatoes in the States and Territories in 1850, was 38,268,148 bushels, and in 1860, 42,095,026 bushels. Taking all the States and Territories, there were 1.66 bushels of sweet potatoes raised in 1850 to each inhabitant, and in 1860 1.33 bushels. The great bulk of the crop is raised in the southern States. The following table shows the amount raised in these States in 1860, as compared with 1850: I860. 1850. Alabama 5, 439, 917 5, 4 75, 204 Arkansas 1,566,540 788,149 Florida 1,129,759 757,226 Georgia 6,508,541 6,986,428 Louisiana - 2,060,981 1,428,453 Mississippi 4,563,873 4,741,795 North Carolina 6, 140, 039 5, 095, 709 South Carolina 4,115,688 4,337,469 Tennessee 2,604,672 2,777,716 Texas 1. 846, 612 1, 332, 158 Virgmia 1,960,817 1,813,634 Total 37,937,439 35,533,941 11 Ixxxii INTRODUCTION It will be seen that of the thirty-eight million bushels produced in the United States in 1850, the southern States raised thirty-five millions, and nearly thirty-eight millions in 1860 of the forty-two millions raised in the whole country. Taking all the southern States, there were 4.87 bushels of sweet potatoes raised to each inhabitant in 1850, and in 1860 4.16 bushels, showing a slight decrease in proportion to population. Considerable attention has of late years been given to raising sweet potatoes in the New England, middle, and west- ern States. Connecticut, which raised only eighty bushels in 1850, produced 2,710 bushels in 1860. Delaware produced 65,443 bushels in 1850, and 142,213 bushels in 1860. Maine, which was unreported in 1850, produced 1,435 bushels in 1860. Michigan, which produced 1,177 bushels in 1850, produced 38,492 bushels in 1860. New Jersey, which produced 508,015 bushels in 1850, produced 1,024,832 bushels in 1860. "Wisconsin, which produced 879 bushels in 1850, produced 2,396 bushels in 1860. Illinois, which produced 157,433 bushels in 1850, produced 306,154 bushels in 1860. For the production of sweet potatoes in the other States we would refer to the tables. Since the cessation of commercial intercourse with the southern States the cultivation of sweet potatoes in the northern States has received considerable attention, and were the census taken at this time it would doubtless be found that the crop in these States is very much larger than it was in 1860. DAIEY PRODUCTS. Butter and cheese — Pounds of. -, 1860. States. Butter. Alabama Arkansas California Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Illinois - . Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts .. Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri New Hampshire Now Jersey New York North Carolina.. 6,028,478 4,067,556 3, 095, 035 7, 620, 912 1,430,502 408, 855 5,. 439, 765 28, 052, 551 18, 306, 651 11,953,666 1,093,497 11,716,609 1,444,742 11, 687, 781 5,265,295 8,297,936 15, 503, 482 2,957,673 5,006,610 12,704,837 6,956,764 10,714,447 103,097,280 4,735,495 Cheese. ■ 15,923 16,810 1,343,089 3,898,411 6,579 5,280 15,587 1,848,557 605,795 918, 635 29, 045 190, 400 6,150 1,799,862 8,342 5,294,090 1,641,897 199, 314 4,427 259, 633 2, 232, 092 182, 172 48,548,289 51,119 States. Ohio Oregon Pennsylvania- . . Ehode Island . . . South Carolina . Tennessee Vermont . . , Virginia - . . Wisconsin . Total. TERRITORIES. District of Columbia Dakota Nebraska Nevada New Mexico Utah Washington Total Aggregate . Butter. 48,543,162 1,000,157 58,653,511 1,021,767 3,177,934 10,017,787 5,850,583 15, 900, 359 13,464,722 13,611,328 458,827,729 18,835 2,170 342,541 7,700 13,259 316, 046 153,092 Cheese. 853, 643 459,681.372 21,618,893 105,379 2,508,556 181,511 1,543 135, 575 275, 128 8,215,030 280,852 1,104,300 103,548,868 12,342 37,240 53,331 12, 146 115,059 103,663,927 The total production of butter in the United States and Territories in 1850 was 313,345,306 pounds, and in 1860 459,681,372 pounds. Of cheese, 105,535,893 pounds in 1850, and 103,663,927 pounds in 1860. There is a considerable increase (about fifty per cent.) in the production of butter, but not so in cheese. There was nearly two million pounds more cheese produced in 1850 than in 1860. INTRODUCTION. XXXIU The following table shows the amount of butter and cheese made in the New England States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : states. BUTTER. CHEESE. I860. 1850. 1860. 1850. Connecticut 7,620,912 11,687,781 8,297,936 6,956,764 10,211,767 15,900,359 6,498,119 9,243,811 8,071,370 6,977,056 995,670 12, 137, 980 3,898,411 1,799,862 5,294,090 2,232,092 181,511 8,215,030 5,363,277 2,434,454 7, 088, 142 Maine .. New Hampshire 3, 196, 563 Khode Island .... 316, 508 8, 720, 834 Total 51,485,519 43,924,006 21,620,996 27,119,778 The production of butter in the New England States, has, in round numbers, increased from less than forty-four million pounds in 1850, to over fifty-one miUion pounds in 1860. On the other hand, the production of cheese has decreased from over twenty-seven millions in 1850, to less than twenty- one and three-fourths millions in 1860. Vermont produces more butter and also more cheese than any other New England State. Maine stands next in the production of butter, but produces less cheese than either Massachusetts, Connecticut, or New Hampshire. The following table shows the amount of butter and cheese made in the middle States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : States BUTTER. CHEESE. 1860. 1850. 1860. 1850. 103,097,280 58, 653, 511 10,714,447 1,430,502 5,265,295 18, 835 79,766,094 39, 878, 418 9,487,210 1,055,308 3, 806, 160 14, 872 48,548,289 2,508,556 162, 172 6,579 8,342 49,741,413 2, 505, 034 365,756 Delaware ..-- 3,187 Maryland 3,975 1,500 Total 179, 179, 870 134,008,062 51,253,938 52, 620, 865 The product of butter in the middle States has increased from one hundred and thirty-four mil- lion pounds in 1850, to one hundred and seventy-nine million pounds in 1860. New York makes nearly one-fourth of all the butter made in the United States, and more than one-third of the cheese. ' Pennsylvania comes next in the product of butter. She made over fifty-eight and a half million of pounds in 1860, against less than forty million in 1850. Although Pennsylvania, after New York, supplies more butter than any other State, she produces comparatively but little cheese. The following table shows the amount of butter and cheese made in the western States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : states. BUTTER. CHEESE. 1860. 1850. 1860. 1850. Indiana ...... ..... .... 18,306,651 28,052,551 11,953,666 15,503,482 2,957,673 12,704,837 48, 543, 162 11,716,609 13,611,328 1,093,497 342,541 12,881,535 12,526,543 2,171,188 7,065,878 1,100 7,834,359 34, 449, 379 9,947,523 3,633,750 605,795 1,848,557 918, 635 1,641,897 199,314 259, 633 21,618,893 190,400 1,104,300 29, 045 12, 342 624,564 1,278,225 209,840 1,011,492 203,572 Ohio ' 20,819,542 213,954 400,283 Total .. 164,785,997 90,511,255 28,428,811 24,762,472 Ixxxiv INTRODUCTION. Ohio is the principal dairy State of the west. She makes nearly one-third of all the butter pro- duced in the western States, and over seventy-five per cent, of aU the cheese. Illinois stands second in the western States in the production of butter, making about twenty- eight million pounds in 1860, against twelve and a half million in 1850. Indiana stands third among the western States, and produced over eighteen million pounds in 1860, against less than thirteen million in 1850. Wisconsin shows a marked increase in this production. She has increased from three and a half million pounds in 1860, to thirteen and a half million pounds in 1860. Minnesota shows even greater progress in butter-making. From eleven hundred pounds in 1850, she increased to nearly three million pounds in 1860. The cheese product of the west is exceedingly small. Leaving out Ohio, the western States do not produce seven million pounds of cheese. Vermont produces more cheese than all the western States together, exclusive of Ohio. The following table shows the amount of butter and cheese made in the southern States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : states BUTTER. CHEESE. 1860. 1850. I860. 1850. Alabama .............. 6,028,478 4,067,556 408, 655 5,439,765 5,006,610 1,^44,743 4, 735, 495 3,777,934 10,017,787 5,850,583 13,464,722 4,008,811 1,854,239 371,498 4,640,559 4,346,234 683, 069 4,146,290 2,981,850 8, 139, 585 2,344,900 11,089,359 15,923 16,810 5,280 15,587 4,427 6,153 51,119 1,543 135,575 275, 128 280,852 31, 412 Arkansas ... . 30,088 Florida 18, 015 Geor^a .. . 46, 976 Mississippi 21, 191 Louisiana 1,957 North Carolina 95, 921 South Carolina 4,970 Tennessee . 177, 681 Texas 95,299 Virginia 436,292 Total 59,642,527 44,606,394 808,397 959, 802 The amount of butter made in the southern States has increased from forty-four and a half million pounds in 1850, to nearly sixty million pounds in 1860. The cheese product in the southern States is exceedingly light, and has fallen off since 1850. The following table shows the amount of butter and cheese made in the Pacific States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : BUTTER. CHEESE. 1860. 1850. 1860. 1850. California... 3, 095, 035 1,000,157 13, 259 153, 092 3i6, 046 705 211,464 HI 1,343,689 105, 379 37,240 12, 146 53, 331 150 Oregon 36,980 5,848 New Mexico Washington Utah 83, 309 30, 998 Total 4,577,589 295,589 1,551,785 73,976 The production of butter, as of every other agricultural product, has advanced in California with astonishing rapidity. In 1850 only 705 pounds were produced; while in 1860 California produced aver three million pounds of butter, and over one and a quarter million pounds of cheese. She made nearly sixty-eight per cent, more cheese than all the southern States. INTRODUCTION. Ixxxv The following table shows the amount of butter and cheese made in the different sections of the country in proportion to population : BUTTER. CHEESE. I860. 1850. 1860. 1850. New liiiiglaiid States 16.42 21. 50 16.08 6.55 7.92 14.62 16.10 16.08 14.33 6.12 1.65 13.51 6.89 6.15 2.78 0.09 2.70 3.29 9.94 Middle States 7.94 Western States 3.92 Southern States 0.13 0.47 United States and Territories .. 4.11 It will be seen that the States and Territories raised about thirteen and a half pounds of butter to each inhabitant in 1850, and fourteen and five-eighths pounds in 1860, showing an increase of one and one-eighth pound to each person. In cheese, however, the production has not kept pace with the population. It has fallen off over three-fourths of a pound to each person. Cheese does not enter as largely into the dietary of the United States as in most other countries, and small as is the amount produced — less than four pounds to each inhabitant — it more than meets the demand, leaving a con- siderable balance for exportation. The production of butter in the New England States more than keeps pace with the increase in population. Over sixteen pounds of butter is produced to each person. . In the middle States twenty-one and a half pounds of butter is made to each person. In 1860 it was only sixteen pounds, showing a very remarkable increase. The western States produced about fourteen pounds to each person in 1850, and sixteen pounds in 1860, also showing a decided increase. In the southern States, too, the production of butter keeps pace with the population. The amount made, however, is small, only six and a half pounds to each inhabitant. The Pacific States, which produced only a little over one and a half pound of butter to each per- son in 1850, produced nearly eight pounds in 1860. In cheese, all the different sections, with the exception of the Pacific States, show a marked dechne as compared with population. The New England States, which produced nearly ten pounds of cheese to each inhabitant in 1850, produces less than seven pounds in 1860. It will be observed, however, that New England still produces more cheese in proportion to population than any other section. The middle States have fallen off from nearly eight pounds of cheese to each person in 1850, to about six pounds in 1860. The Pacific States have increased their cheese product from less than half a pound to each per- son in 1850, to nearly three pounds in 1860. Since the census was taken, the production of cheese, especially in the great dairy districts of New York, has greatly increased. The " cheese factory " system which was introduced a few years ago has been stimulated into an astonishing development by the high price of cheese caused by the high premium on gold and sterhng exchange. The cheese made in these factories is generally of better quahty than that hitherto made in private dairies, and pains have been taken to adapt it to the wants of the European market. The cheese is sent to England, and, being sold for gold, the price in this coun- try increases with the premium on gold and sterhng exchange. At the time of this writing, (Novem- ber, 1864,) cheese in New York sells for twenty-two cents per pound. In 1859 the highest price of cheese in New York at the same period was eleven cents per pound; in 1860 eleven and a half cents, and in 1861 seven and a half cents. Cheese is now more than double the average price obtained before the war. The effect of these high prices, as we have before remarked, is seen in the increased atten- Ixxxvi INTRODUCTION. tion paid to the manufacture of cheese, and especially to the general introduction of the "factory system." The leading idea of the factory system is this : Farmers with a few cows, to avoid the expense of the necessary buildings, and to introduce the best apparatus for the manufacture of cheese, unite to send their milk every morning to a certain point, where it is converted into cheese, and each farmer receives his proportion (or the money received for it) according to the quantity of milk he has furnished. At the factory a competent person is employed to attend to the business, and the cheese is made on the most approved principles. Hitherto the system has worked to the mutual advantage of all concerned. Whether it will be found to work equally well when cheese falls to its normal price (or about half what it brings at present) remains to be seen. WOOL. Pounds of wool produced in the United States in 1860. STATES. FOUNDS. STATES. POUNDS. Alabama Arkansas California Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana .:.... Maine Maryland Massachusetts . . Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri New Hampshire New Jersey New York North Carolina . Ohio 775, 117 410, 382 2, 683, 109 335, 896 50, 201 .59, 171 946, 227 1, 989, 567 2, 552, 318 660, 858 24, 746 2, 329, 105 290, 847 1, 495, 060 491,511 377, 267 3, 960, 888 20, 388 665, 959 2, 069, 778 1,160,222 349, 250 9, 454, 474 883, 473 10, 608, 927 Oregon Pennsylvania. . Ehode Island.. South Carolina Tennessee Texas Vermont Virginia Wisconsin . Total, States TERRITORIES. District of Columbia. Dakota Nebraska Nevada New Mexico Utah Washington Total, Territories Aggregate 219,012 4, 752, 522 90, 699 427, 102 1, 405, 236 1, 493, 738 3, 118, 960 2,510,019 1,011,933 59, 673, 952 100 3, 302 330 492, 645 74, 765 19, 819 590, 961 60 264, 913 The total amount of wool raised in the States and Territories in 1850 was 52,516,959 pounds; in 1860, 60,364,913 pounds ; and in 1840 was 35,802,114 pounds. In other words, the amount of wool increased from 1840 to 1850 about 16,750,000 pounds; and from 1850 to 1860, 7,750,000 pounds. INTRODUCTION. Ixxxvii The following table shows the amount of wool produced in the New England States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : 1860. 1850. Connecticut 335, 866 497, 454 Maine 1, 495, 060 1, 364, 034 Massachusetts 377, 267 585, 136 New Hampshire 1, 160, 222 1, 108, 476 Rhode Island 90, 699 129, 692 Vermont 3, 118, 950 3, 400, 717 Total 6, 578, 064 7, 085, 509 In 1850 there were over 7,000,000 pounds of wool produced in the New England States, and 6,500,000 pounds in 1860, showing a decrease of 500,000 pounds. Vermont raised nearly half the wool produced in the New England States. From 1850 to 1860, however, the amount of wool produced in this State has fallen off more than 275,000 pounds Maine stands next, in the New England States, to Vermont, as a wool-growing State. In 1850 she produced 1,364,034 pounds of wool, and 1,495,060 pounds in 1860, showing an increase of over 100,000 pounds. New Hampshire stands third, and in this State, also, there is a slight increase from 1850 to 1860. In Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island, as well as in Vermont, the produce of wool has fallen off since 1850. The following table shows the amount of wool raised in the middle States in 1860 as compared with 1850: I860. ' 1850. New York 9, 454, 474 10, 071, 301 New Jersey 349, 250 375, 396 Pennsylvania 4,722,522 4,481,570 Maryland , 491,511 477,438 Delaware - - - . 50, 201 57, 768 District of Columbia 100 525 Total 15, 098, 058 15, 463, 998 This is a falling off in the amount of wool produced in the middle States since 1850 of nearly 375,000 pounds. New York produces about two-thirds of all the wool grown in the middle States. In 1850 she produced 10,071,301 pounds, and 9,454,474 pounds in 1860, or over 500,000 pounds less than in 1850. Pennsylvania produced 4,486,570 pounds in 1850, and 4,752,522 pounds in 1860, or an increase of over 250,000 pounds. The following table shows the amount of wool grown in the western States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Ohio 10. 608, 927 10, 196, 371 Indiana 2,552,318 2,610,287 Michigan 3,960,888 2,043,283 Illinois 1. 989. 567 2, 150, 113 Wisconsin 1,011,933 253,963 Minnesota 20,388 85 lova 660, 858 373, 898 Missouri 2, 069, 778 1, 627, 164 Kentucky 2,329,105 2,297,433 Kansas 24,746 Nebraska 3' ^02 Totjj ■. 25, 231, 810 21, 552, 597 Ixxxviii INTRODUCTION. In 1850 the western States produced 21,552,597 pounds of wool, and 25,231,810 pounds in 1860, or an increase of nearly 4,000,000 pounds. Ohio is the greatest wool-growing State in the west. She produced over ten and a half million pounds in 1860, or about half a million pounds more than in 1850. Michigan is the next largest wool-growing State in the. west. She produced about 4,000,000 pounds in 1860, against 2,000,000 in 1850. Indiana stands third, producing two and a half million pounds, showing a very slight decrease since 1850. Kentucky stands fourth, with a small increase since 1850. Missouri and Illinois come next, the former representing an increase of twenty-five per cent., while the latter shows a small decrease since 1850. The following table shows the amount of wool grown in the southern States in 18(!0, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Virginia 2,510,019 2,860,765 North Carolina 883,473 970,738 South Carolina 427,102 487,233 Georgia 946,227 990,019 Alabama 775,117 657,118 Louisiana 290,847 109,897 Texas 1,493,738 131,917 Mississippi 665,959 559,619 Arkansas 410,382 182,595 Tennessee 1,405,236 1,364,378 Florida 59,171 23,247 Total 9,867,271 8,337,526 It will be seen that the production of wool in the southern States increased from 8,337,526 pounds in 1850, to 9,867,271 pounds in 1860. Virginia, Texas, and Tennessee are the largest wool-growing States in the south. In Texas the production of wool increased from 131,917 pounds in 1850, to 1,493,738 pounds in 1860. The following table shows the amount of wool grown in the Pacific States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. California 2, 683, 109 5, 520 Oregon 219, 012 29, 686 New Mexico 492,645 32,901 WasHngton 19, 819 Utah 74, 765 9, 222 Total 3, 489, 350 77, 329 The increase in the Pacific States is enormous. From 77,329 pounds in 1850, the production of wool in these States increased to 3,489,350 pounds in 1860. California, it is thought, will soon be one of the largest wool-producing States in the United States. Indeed, Ex-Grovemor Downey Writes "this office under date of June 4, 1863, "We must have now nearly 3,000,000 head of sheep in California, and the quality of the wool is annually im- proving. From the mildness of our climate, and richness of pasture, our State will show at the next census a wool product equal to that of the whole United States at present." INTRODUCTION. Ixxxix The following table shows the amount of wool produced in the different sections of the United States in 1850 and 1860, as compared with population : I860. 1850. ' New England States 2.09 2.59 Middle States 1.81 2.33 Western States 2.46 3.41 Southern States 1.08 1.01 Pacific States 6.04 0.43 United States and Territories 1.92 2.26 It will be seen that the Pacific States is the only section in which the production of wool has more than kept pace with the population. These States have increased from less than half a pound of wool to each person in 1850, to over six pounds in 1860. In all the other sections the production of wool in proportion to population has decreased since 1850, excepting the southern States, where there is a slight increase. The New England States stand next as wool- producers ; but here, too, the growth of wool does not keep pace with the increase in population. It was 2.59 pounds to each person in 1850, and only 2.09 pounds in 1860. In the middle States the growth of wool in 1850 was 2.33 pounds to each person, and in 1860 only 1.81 pound. Leaving out the Pp,cific States, the highest production of wool in proportion to population was in the western States. It has fallen off, however, from 3.41 pounds in 1850 to 2.46 pounds in 1860. In the southern States the growth of wool to each person was 1.01 pound in 1850, and 1.08 pounds in 1860, showing an increase of about one ounce to each inhabitant. Taking all the States and Territories, the amount of wool raised in 1850 was a little over two and a quarter pounds to each inhabitant and in 1860 less than two pounds. FLAX. Flax produced. States. 1850. I860. Flax. Flax. 1850. Flax. 1860. Flax. Alabama Arkansas California Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts .. Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri New Hampshire. New Jersey New York North Carolina. . Pounds, 3,921 12,291 17,928 11, 174 50 5,387 160,063 584,469 62,660 i 2, 100, 116 17,081 35, 686 1,162 7,153 665 627, 160 7,652 182,965 940,577 593,796 Pounds. Ill 3,821 1,187 8,112 3,303 48,235 97, 119 30,226 1,135 728,234 Ohio Oregon Pennsylvania.. Ehode Island... South Carolina Tennessee , Texas Vermont Virginia Wisconsin Pounds. 446,933 640 530,307 85 332 368, 131 1,048 20,852 1,000,450 68, 393 Pounds. 882,423 162 3)2,368 344 164,294 115 7.007 487,808 21,644 Total. 7,709,126 4,715,802 2,997 14,481 165 4,138 1,983 50 109, 837 1,347 48, 651 1,518,025 216, 490 TERRITORIES. District of Columbia . Dakota Nebraska Nevada New Mexico Utai Washington Total 550 4,343 550 4,343 Aggregate. 7, 709, 676 4,720,145 12 xc INTRODUCTION. The amount of flax produced in the States and Territories in 1850 was 7,709,676 pounds, and in 1860 4,720,145 pounds. In other words, the production of flax has fallen off almost one half since 1850. Since the commencement of the war flax culture has received increased attention, owing to the ::^arcity of cotton, and it is not improbable that, were the census taken now, it would be found that the liax crop was at least as great as in 1850. The climate of the northern States is admirably adapted to the growth of flax, and all that is needed to make it a highly remunerative crop is the introduction of machines for dressing the fibre and preparing it for market. Great improvements have recently taken place in the machines for this purpose, and there can be no doubt that flax will be much more exten- sively cultivated. The following table shows the amount of flax grown in the New England States in 1860, as com- pared with 1850: Connecticut Maine , Massachusetts New Hampshire 1, 347 Vermont Khode Island 1860. 1850. 1,187 17, 928 2,997 17, 081 265 1,162 1,347 7,652 7,007 20, 852 85 Total 12, 703 64, 760 The amount of flax raised in the New England States has fallen off from 64,760 pounds in 1850, to 12,703 pounds in 1860. Vermont is the largest flax-producing State in New England, but even in this State the crop has fallen off from 20,852 pounds in 1850, to 7,007 pounds in i860. The following table shows the amount of flax grown in the middle States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : New York 1, 518, 025 New Jersey Delaware Maryland Pennsylvania 1860. 1850. 618, 025 940, 577 48, 651 182, 965 8,112 11, 174 14, 481 35, 686 312, 368 530, 307 Total 1, 901, 637 1, 700, 709 In New York the crop of flax increased from 940,577 pounds in 1850, to 1,518,025 pounds in 1860. In Pennsylvania, on the other hand, there was a falling off in the production of flax from 530,307 pounds in 1850, to 312,368 pounds in 1860. In New Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland, the crop of flax has also decreased since 1850. The following table shows the amount of flax produced in the western States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : Ohio Indiana. .. Michigan . Illinois Wisconsin Minnesota Iowa Missouri . . Kentucky Kansas . . . Nebraska . 1860. 1850. 882, 423 446, 932 97, 119 584, 469 4,128 7,152 48, 235 160, 063 21, 644 68, 393 1,983 30, 226 62, 660 109, 837 627, 160 728, 234 2, 100, 116 1,135 Total 1,924,964 4,056,945 INTRODUCTION. xci It will be seen that there is a great falling off in the production of flax in the western States, where over four million pounds of flax was raised in 1850, and less than two million pounds in 1860. Kentucky, in 1850, was decidedly the largest flax-producing State in the country, raising nearly one-third of all the flax grown in the United States. The returns for 1860 show an astonishing diminution in the growth of flax in this State. From over two million pounds in 1850, the production of flax is less than three-quarters of a million in 1860. Ohio is now the largest flax-producing State in the west. From 446,932 pounds in 1850, she has increased to 882,423 pounds in 1860. On the other hand, Indiana and Missouri, which produced a large crop of flax in 1850, have, like Kentucky, fallen off" to an astonishing degree. Missouri, which produced 627,160 pounds in 1850, now produces only 109,837 pounds ; and Indiana, which produced 584,469 pounds in 1850, produces only 97,119 pounds. The following table shows the amount of flax grown in the southern States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. Alabama Ill Arkansas 3, 821 Florida Georgia 3, 303 Louisiana Mississippi 50 North Carolina 216, 490 South Carolina 344 Tennessee 164, 294 Texas 115 yirginia 487, 808 Total '. 876, 336 1850. 3, 921 12, 291 50 5, 387 665 593, ,796 333 368, 131 1, ,048 1, 000, 450 1, 986, 072 The production of flax in the southern States has fallen off more than one-half since 1850. Virginia is the principal flax-producing State in the south. She raises more flax than all the other southern States. The amount of flax raised in Virginia has fallen off from one million pounds in 1850, to less than half a million pounds in 1860. North Carolina and Tennessee are the only other southern States in which flax is grown to any extent. The following table shows the amount of flax grown in the Pacific States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. California Oregon 162 640 New Mexico Utah 4, 343 550 Washington Total 4, 505 1, 190 In California there was no flax reported either in 1850 or 1860. In Oregon there was produced 640 pounds in 1850, and only 162 pounds in 1860. In Utah the production of flax increased from 550 pounds in 1850, to 4,343 pounds in 1860. The following table shows the amount of flax in ounces grown in the different sections in 1860 and in 1850 in proportion to population : ]860. 1850. New England States 0.06 0.33 Middle States 3.68 4 25 Western States 3.00 10.29 Southern States 1.52 4.09 United States and Territories 2.37 5.31 xcn INTRODUCTION. In 1850 there was less than five and a half ounces of flax raised in the whole States and Terri- tories to each inhabitant, and in 1860 less than two and a half ounces to each person. The New England States raised one-third of an ounce to each person in 1850, and only six-hun- dredths of an ounce in 1860. The middle States produced 4.25 ounces in 1850 to each inhabitant, and 3.68 ounces in 1860. The western States produced over ten ounces to each inhabitant in 1850, and only three ounces in 1860. The southern States produced over four ounces in 1850 to each person, and only 1.52 ounces in 1860. As we have before remarked, there can be little doubt that since the census was taken, there has been considerable increase in the growth of flax; but making full allowance for this probable increase, the production of flax in the United States, with a climate admirably adapted for its growth, is exceed- ingly small. The principal cause of this is doubtless owing to the high price of labor, which renders the preparation of the crop more expensive than it is in other countries from which our imports of flax are derived. If the machines recently introduced for dressing flax shall prove as efficient as present experience indicates, the production of flax, stimulated by the high price of cotton, will greatly increase. FLAX-SEED. Bushels qfjlaai-seed produced in the United States in 1860. STATES. BUSHELS. STATES. BUSHELS. Alabama Arkansas California Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts . . Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri New Hampshire New Jersey New York North Carolina . Ohio 68 545 109 2, 126 96 8,670 119, 420 5,921 11 28, 875 Oregon Pennsylvania.. Ghode Island . . South Carolina Tennessee Texas ... . Vermont Virginia Wisconsin 6 24, 198 313 9,362 331 32, 691 4,256 Total, States 566, 802 TERRITORIES. 419 1, 570 7 341 118 3 4,656 30 3,241 56, 991 20, 008 242, 420 District of Columbia. Dakota Nebraska Nevada New Mexico Utah Washington 33 30 Total, Territories Aggregate 65 566, 867 We have not space to go into a detailed examination of the production of flax-seed in the difierent sections. "We may remark, however, that Ohio produces more flax-seed than any other State. Indiana stands next. The States and Territories in 1850 produced 562,312 bushels of flax-seed, and 566,867 bushels in 1860; showing an increase of only a little over four thousand bushels. INTRODUCTION. xciii The high price of linseed oil, as well as of linseed oil-cake during the war, will doubtless stimn- late the growth of flax for seed as well as for the fibre. American oil-cake finds a ready market in England at high prices ; but it would seem that so valuable a food might be used on our own farms with decided advantage. It is not only highly nutritious for cattle and sheep, but the manure derived from the animals eating it is more than twice as valuable as that from animals fed on Indian corn. Our farmers have not yet learned to appreciate the full value of manures, and it is rare that the question of the relative value of manures from different foods is taken into consideration in determining what particular sustenance it is best to give our farm stock. In this connexion we would call particular attention to the following table prepared by John B. Lawes, the well-known English scientific agriculturist, showing the value of manure made from a ton (2,000 pounds) of difierent foods : Description of food. Value. 1. Decorticated cotton-seed cake #27 86 ■"-:2. Rape cake 21 01 3. Linseed cake 19 72 4. Malt dust 18 21 .'). Lentils 16 51 6. Linseed IS 65 7. Tares 15 75 8. Beans 15 75 9. Peas 13 38 10. Locust beans 4 81 11. Oats 7 40 12. Wheat 7 08 13. Indian corn 6 65 Description of food. Value. 14. Malt $6 65 15. Barley 6 32 16. Clover hay 9 64 17. Meadow hay 6 43 18. Oat straw 2 90 19. Wheat straw •. 2 68 20. Barley straw 2 25 21. Potatoes 1 50 22. Mangolds 1 07 23. Swedish turnips 91 24. Common turnips 86 25. Carrots 86 This table deserves to be profoundly studied by every farmer. Mr. Lawes has been engaged for many years in experiments on this subject, and we have no doubt that the table correctly states the relative value of the manures obtained from the different foods ; that is to say, if the manure obtained from the consumption of a ton of meadow hay is worth $6 43, that made from a ton of clover hay is worth $9 64, or half as much again; and this is true everywhere. The estimates are based on the value of manure in England, and are undoubtedly correct; but of course the figures are only true relatively where manures of all kinds are of less value, as is the case in the newer sections of this country. It will be seen that the manure made from a ton of linseed cake is estimated at $19 72';' while from a ton of Indian corn it is estimated at only $6 65. It must be borne in mind that these are gold values. At the present time the value of the manures in our currency would be more than doubled. If these few remarks should be the means of calling the attention of American farmers to this important branch of rural economy much good. will be ac- complished. COTTON. The amount of ginned cotton raised in the United States in 1860 was 5,387,052 bales, of 400 pounds each, or 2,154,820,800 pounds. In 1850 there was 2,445,793 bales of cotton raised in the United States, or less than half the amount produced in 1860. XCIV INTRODUCTION. The following table wiir show the amount of ginned cotton, in bales of 400 pounds each, raised in the different States in 1860, and also in 1850: Missouri Virginia . . . . Illinois Utah Kansas New Mexico . 1860. 41, 188 - 1800. 12, 727 1,482 3, 947 136 61 19 5, 387, 052 2, 445, 793 1860. 1850. Mississippi 1, 202, 507 484, 292 Alabama 989, 955 564, 429 Louisiana 777, 738 178, 737 Georgia 701,840. 499,091 Texas 431, 463 58, 072 Arkansas 367, 393 05, 344 South Carolina 353,412 300,901 Tennessee 296, 464 194, 532 North Carolina 145,514 50,545 Florida 65,153 45,131 "We have here omitted a few States which produced small quantities of cotton in 1850, but which are unreported in 1860, But the total amount is given correctly. Mississippi produces more cotton than any other State. This State alone raised nearly half as much cotton in 1860 as the whole United States in 1850. Alabama comes next, and then Louisiana, Georgia standing fourth, though but little behind her sister States. These four States, Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana, and Georgia, produced 3,672,040 bales of cotton, while all the other States produced only 1,715,012 bales. Texas, Arkansas, and South Carolina come next in the order named. Tennessee and North Carolina stand eighth and ninth ; the two together, however, produce less cotton than the new State of Texas. RICE. Pounds of rice produced in the United States in 1860. STATES. Alabama Arkansas California Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Illinois .y Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts . . Michigan Minnesota Mississippi .... Missouri New Hampshire New Jersey New York North Carolina . Ohio POUNDS. 493, 465 16, 831 2,140 223, 704 52, 507, 652 6, 331, 257 ■ 716 • 3, 286 809, 082 .9, 767 7, 593, 976 STATES. Oregon Pennsylvania. . Rhode Island . . South Carolina Tennessee Texas Vermont Virginia Wisconsin Total, States TERRITORIES. District of Columbia. Dakota Nebraska Nevada New Mexico Utah Washington Total, Territories Aggregate POUNDS. 119, 100, 528 40, 372 26, 031 8, 225 187, 167, 032 187, 167, 032 INTRODUCTION xcv The cultivation of rice is confined to a very few States. South Carolina and Georgia produced in 1860 171,608,180 pounds; and the total product of all the States was only 187,167,032 pounds. In 1850 these same States produced still more — the two together giving 198,881,304 pounds ; but the production of rice was greater in 1850 than in 1860 in nearly all the States, making the total 215,313,497 pounds. Of this, South Carolina in 1850 produced 159,930,613 pounds, and in 1860 119,100,528 pounds. Mississippi, which in 1860 produced only 809,082 pounds, in 1850 raised 2,719,856 pounds; and Alabama decreased still more, producing 2,312,352 pounds in 1850, and only 493,465 pounds in 1860. Florida, in 1850, produced 1,075,090 pounds; but in 1860 only 223,704. The only States that increased in production, were Georgia, North Carolina, and Louisiana. HOPS. Pounds of hops prodticed in the United States in 1860. STATES. POUNDS. STATES. POUNDS. Alabama Arkansas California Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Illinois Indiana Iowa , Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland , Massachusetts . . Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri New Hampshire New Jersey : New York , North Carolina . , Ohio , 507 146 80 959 414 199 7,254 27, 884 2,078 197 5,899 27 102, 987 2,943 111,301 60, 602 132 248 2,265 130, 428 3,722 9, 671, 931 1,767 27, 533 Oregon Pennsylvania . Rhode Island.. South Carolina Tennessee Texas Vermont Virginia Wisconsin 493 43, 191 50 122 1,581 123 638, 67? 10, 024 135, 58'* Total, States 10,991,351 TEEKITORIES. District of Columbia . Dakota Nebraska Nevada New Mexico Utah '. Washington 15 41 545 44 Total, Territories Aggregate 645 10, 991, 996 The total production of hops in the United States in 1850 was 3,497,029 pounds; and in 1860 10,991,996 pounds, showing a remarkable increase in the cultivation of this crop. New York produces nearly all the hops raised in the United States. In 1850 this State produced over two and a half miUion pounds, while all the other States and Territories produced less than one miUion pounds; and in 1860 New York produced over nine and a half miUion pounds, while' all the other States and Territories produced less than one and a half million pounds. Next to New York, Vermont raises more hops than any other State, producing 638,677 pounds in 1860, against 288,023 pounds in 1850. In this country, as in England, the cultivation of hops is confined to a comparatively small area. New York raises over eight-tenths of all the hops produced in the United States ; and in this State XCVl INTRODUCTION. the bulk of the crop is raised in a few counties. The county of Otsego produces 3,507,069 pounds ; Madison, 1,520,657 pounds; Schoharie, 1,441,648 pounds; Oneida, 838,460 pounds; Herkimer, 707,910 pounds ; Montgomery, 515,584 pounds. These six counties in New York produce over eight and a half million pounds of hops, out of a total crop of eleven millions in the States and Territories. TOBACCO. Pounds of tobacco produced in, the United Staters in 1860. STATES. Alabama Arkansas California Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts . . Michigan Minnesota Mississippi . . . . Missouri New Hampshire New Jersey New York North Carolina . Ohio POUNDS. 232, 914 989, 980 3,150 6, 000, 133 9,699 828, 815 919,318 6, 885, 262 7, 993, 378 303, 168 20, 349 108, 126, 840 39, 940 1,583 38, 410, 965 3, 233, 198 121. 099 38,938 159, 141 25, 086, 196 18, 58i 149, 485 5, 764, 582 32, 853, 250 25, 092, 581 STATES. Oregon Pennsylvania . . Bhode Island . South Carolina Tennessee Texas Vermont Virginia Wisconsin Total, States TERRITORIES. District of Columbia. Dakota Nebraska Nevada New Mexico Utah Washington . . Total, Territories Aggregate POUNDS. 405 3, 181, 586 705 104, 412 43, 448, 097 97, 914 12, 245 123, 968, 312 87, 340 434, 183, 561 15, 200 10 3,636 7,044 10 25, 900 434, 209, 461 The amount of tobacco raised in the States and Territories in 1850 was 199,752,655 pounds ; and in 1860 434,209,461 pounds, showing an increase of nearly 220 per cent. Of this amount Virginia produced in 1860 123,968,312 pounds, and Kentucky 108,126,840 pounds. In other words, these two States produced in 1860 more than half the tobacco grown in the United States. In 1850 Virginia raised 56,803,227 pounds, and Kentucky 55,501,196 pounds, or 112,304,423 pounds together. In other words, in 1850, out of a total product of tobacco of less than two hundred million pounds in the States and Territories, these two States produced over one hundred and twelve million. It will be seen, too, that the increase in the crop of tobacco in these two States since 1850 is over 100 per cent., which, considering the magnitude of the crop in 1850, is very remarkable. INTIiODUCTION. xcvii The following table shows the quantity of tobacco grown in the New England States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Connecticut ....,..;' 6, 000, 133 1, 267, 624 Maine • 1, 583 Massachusetts 3, 233, 198 138, 246 New Hampshire 18, o81 50 Rhode Island 705 Vermont 12, 245 Total 9, 266, 445 1, 405, 920 In 1850 the amount of tobacco raised in the New England States was less than one and a half mil- lion pounds, while in 1860 it was over nine and a quarter million pounds — an increase of over 500 per cent. Of the nine and a quarter million pounds raised in the New England States, Connecticut produced six million, and Massachusetts over three and one-fifth million. ' The following table shows the amount of tobacco grown in the middle States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. New York 6, 764, 582 83, 189 New Jersey 149, 485 310 Pennsylvania 3, 181 , 586 912, 651 Maryland 38, 410, 965 21, 407, 497 Delaware , 9, 699 District of Columbia 15, 200 7, 800 Total 47, 531, 517 22, 411, 447 Maryland produced nearly twenty-one and a half million pounds of tobacco in 1850, while all the other middle States produced only about one million pounds. la 1860 this State produced nearly thirty-eight and a half million pounds,, while the other middle States produced over nine million; New York and Pennsylvania show a remarkable increase in the tobacco crop. New York has increased from 83,189 pounds in 1850, to over five and three-fourth million pounds in 1860. The increase in Penn- sylvania is by no means so great, but is nevertheless quite striking. The following table shows the amount of tobacco raised in the southern States in 1860, as com- pared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Alabama 232, 914 164, 990 Arkansas 989, 980 218, 936 Florida 828, 815 998, 614 Georgia 919,318 423,924 Mississippi 159. 141 49, 960 North Carolina 32, 853, 250 11, 984, 786 South Carolina 104, 413 74,'285 Louisiana 39,940 . 26,'878 Tennessee 43, 448, 097 20, 148,'932 Texas 97,914 66,897 Virginia , 123, 968, 312 56, 803, 227 •- Total 203, 642, 093 90, 961, 489 Virginia, Tennessee, and North Carolina are the three principal tobacco-growing States in the south. These three States produce two hundred million pounds of the two hundred and three and a half million pounds raised in the southern States. J3 xcviii INTRODUCTION. The following table shows the amount of tobacco raised in the western States in 1860, as com- pared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Illinois 6, 885, 262 841, 394 Indiana 7, 993, 378 1, 044, 620 Iowa 303,168 6,041 Kansas 20, 349 - ■ - Kentucky 108, 126, 840 55, 501, 196 Michigan 121. 099 1, 245 Missouri 25, 086, 196 17, 113, 784 Ohio 25, 092, 581 10, 454, 449 Wisconsin 87, 340 1, 268 Minnesota 38, 938 Nebraska 3, 636 Total 173, 758, 787 84, 963, 997 Next to Kentucky, Ohio and Missouri are the greatest tobacco-growing States in the west. The crop has also increased largely in these States since 1850. Indiana and Illinois come next, the former producing nearly eight million pounds, and the latter nearly 'seven miUion pounds. The following table shows the amount of tobacco grown in the Pacific States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Califernia 3, 150. 1, 000 Oregon 405 325 New Mexico '. 7, 044 8, 467 Utah 70 Washington 10 Total 10, 609 9, 862 But little tobacco is raised on the Pacific coast, and it has increased a mere trifle since 1850. In fact, in New Mexico there is an actual decrease, which is true of no other State except Florida. The returns show that tobacco is raised in every State, and in all the Territories except Dakota. In 1850 the amount of tobacco raised in all of the States and Territories was eight pounds to each inhabitant, and in 1860 about fourteen pounds. The unsettled condition of Kentucky since the com- mencement of the war, with the loss of almost the entire crop in Virginia, have caused a great diminu- tion in the supply of tobacco, and prices have advanced very rapidly. This has stimulated the cultiva- tion of tobacco in the northern States to an extent which it never would have attained in ordinary circumstances. The principal variety of tobacco grown in the northern States is the Connecticut seed-leaf. It is ordinarily grown for cigar wrappers, and the larger and more perfect the leaf the more profitable is the crop. For smoking or chewing it is an inferior variety. In fact, it seems almost impossible to grow a good quality of chewing-tobacco in the northern States. It is found much more profitable to grow a large, tough leaf, suitable for cigar wrappers, than to attempt to grow a smaller crop of better quality. INTRODUCTION. XCIX CANE SUGAR, MAPLE SUGAR, SORGHUM MOLASSES, HONEY, &c. Table showing the quantity of cane and, maple sugar, and cane, maple, and sorghum molasses produced in the United States in 1860. Cane sugar, hogs- STATES. heads of 1,000 pounds each. Maple sugar, pounds of. Cane molasses, gallons of. Maple molasses, gallons of. Sorghum mo- lasses, gallons of. 175 228 3,077 85,115 124 6 2,.277 55, 653 ArkansBs 115,604 California 552 Connecticut . ._ 44,259 395 Delaware , _ . . 1,613 Florida 1,669 1,167 436,357 546,749 991 134, 195 1,541,761 315,436 3,742 380,941 20 20,048 292,908 11,405 2 140, 076 103,490 806,589 881,049 1,211,512 Kansas --- ■ ..--. 87, 656 TCftTihiP-lty 356,705 221,726 13,439,772 Maine ...... 306,742 63,281 1,006,078 4,051,822 370,669 99 142,028 2,255,012 3,455 10,816,419 30,845 3,345,508 32, 679 2,404 15,307 78,998 23, 038 Maiyland . 907 Massachusetts Michigan ._.....-.. .. .. . .... 86,953 ■ Minnesota - ...... . .. ... 14, 178 506 402 10, 016 22, 305 1,427 18,289 43, 833 8,088 131,843 17,759 370,512 796,111 New Jersey 396 New York 516 North Carolina - - 38 12,494 263,475 Ohio 779, 076 315 2,767,335 114,310 22,749 20 198 2 5,099 205 115,620 51,041 2,830 408, 358 74,372 706,663 Texas 112,412 9,897,781 938, 103 1,584,451 16,253 99, 605 83, 118 221,270 19,854 230, 982 40,120,083 14, 903, 996 1,597,274 6,698,181 TERRITORIES. • 20 122 275 23,497 INevada 1,950 TTful. • 40 2.5,475 122 315 50,942 230,982 40,120,205 14,963,996 ],C97,589 6, 749, 123 The total amount of cane sugar produced in the United States in 1850 was 236,814,000 pounds; and in 1«60, 230,982,000 pounds, showing a slight decrease in the last decade. c INTRODUCTION Louisiana produces over two hundred and twenty-one million of the two hundred and thirty mil- lion pounds raised in the whole United States. Texas produced over five million pounds of cane sugar in 1860, being the greatest- sugar-growing State after Louisiana. Of maple sugar there was produced in 1850, in the whole United States and Territories, 34,253,436 pounds ; and in 1860, 40,120,205 pounds, or an increase of nearly six million pounds. Of this amount New York and Vermont produced more than half; the former producing nearly eleven million pounds, and the latter nearly ten million pounds. Michigan stands third, producing four million pounds. Ohio produces over three millions ; Penn- sylvania two and three quarter millions; New Hampshire two and a quarter millions ; Wisconsin and Indiana each one and a half miUion ; Massachusetts and Virginia about one million pounds each. For the amount raised in the other States we would refer to the foregoing, table. The article known as maple sugar is made from the sap of the Acer Saccharinum, or sugar maple, (known also as rock maple,) one of the most symmetrical and beautiful of American forest trees. It is found in nearly every State of the Union, but is most abundant between the parallels of 43° and 46°. The process of making the sugar may be briefly described as follows: As soon as the sap begins to flow in the spring, which is usually from the 1st to the 15th of March, the trees are "tapped" by boring one or two holes of half an inch in diameter and two inches deep, in each tree, and from fifteen to twenty-four inches above the ground. Into these holes are inserted hollow wooden plugs, called "quills," which conduct the sap into wooden troughs or pails placed beneath. Sometimes the orifice is made with a heavy, curvilinear chisel, which is driven into the sap-wood with a wooden mallet, and a wooden spout, properly prepared, is inserted to carry oiF the sap. The careless use of the axe in tap- ping, is frequently indulged to the great injury of the trees and to their premature destruction. The sap, ordinarily, runs only in the day-time and after frosty nights, commencing as soon as it begins to thaw in the morning, and ceasing as soon as it begins to freeze towards evening. Each tree will yield from one to four gallons of sap in twenty-four hours. Cold and dry winters, with frosty nights and warm, sunny days during the "sugaring season," are most favorable for the production of sap. The sap is collected from the troughs and placed in sheet-iron pans of about eight inches deep, four feet wide and eight to twelve feet long, set on brick arches, (kettles were formerly used for the purpose.) A brisk boiling is kept up in the pans for twelve or fifteen hours, fresh sap being occasionally added, when the whole reaches the consistency of "sirup," in which form much of it is used for domestic purposes. The sirup is then strained and put in kettles holding from eight to ten gallons each, where it is again kept boiling for about two hours. (The best makers pour into each kettle-full of sirup about one pint of new milk to assist in clarifying.) During this process the impurities rise to the sur- face and are carefully skimmed off". When the sirup has boiled sufficiently to "grain" well, it is al- lowed to partially cool, (stirring constantly,) and is then poured into pans or moulds, when it becomes the "maple sugar" of commerce. On the average, twenty quarts of sap will make one pound of sugar, and each tree will produce from three to four pounds of sugar annually. Very large trees will produce eight to ten pounds. The sugaring season usually lasts from four to six weeks, and until the buds of the tree begin to swell vigorously, when the sap diminishes in quantity and quality. Of sorghum molasses the product was 6,749,123 gallons. It is an interesting fact, as showing how rapidly a plant can be distributed through the country, that we have returns of sorghum molasses from twenty-eight out of the thirty-four States reported. The high price of sugar and molasses since the war has stimulated the cultivation of sorghum to to an unusual degree. The drought of 1863 in the west, followed by an unusually severe frost before the plants were ripe, destroyed the sorghum crop of 1863. Had the season been favorable, a large INTRODUCTION. ci amount of sorghum molasses would have been produced, as there was a larger area planted than ever before. The disastrous effect of the drought and early frost served to discourage many from planting in 1864 who would otherwise have engaged in the business. Sugar has not been made to any extent from sorghum, and thus far the difficulties in the way of its manufacture, adverted to in our previous reports, have not been overcome. BEET SUGAR. Within the last three years the price of sugar has doubled, and it is not improbable that the pres- ent high price will be maintained for some time to come. Many trials have been made to manufacture an indigenous sugar, but, unhappily, the experiments have not been made to any extent on the proper vegetable. The sorghum has been tried and proves valuable for sirup, but the great difficulty in making sugar has not been overcome, and the high price, of this article continues. We have been surprised that the cane has not yet been, to some extent, supplanted by the beet which involves no trials for experiments, as this plant has been cultivated successfully for a long period in France for this purpose, and the products obtained cannot be rivalled in beauty or exceeded in quality by the product of the cane. The attempts which have been made to manufacture sugar from beets in this country have, as a general rule, till a year or two past, proved unsuccessful, probably owing to the fact that the experi- ments were tried on a small scale, v^dth the rudest machinery. In France it is found that individual farmers cannot successfully manufacture sugar from the beet. It is properly a manufacturing, and not an agricultural process, one requiring a larger capital than most farmers are willing to invest. The better method would be to establish factories and encourage farmers to raise the beets at established prices per ton. In this way, with improved machinery, and the adoption of the more recent processes of manufacture, we see no reason why beet sugar cannot be produced in this country with great profit and advantage both to the manufacturers and the farmers. The clim^e of the southern and western States is well adapted to the growth of the beet, and as large crops can be grown here as in France. M. de Lavergne, in his recent work on French agriculture, states that the average production of beet- roots in the department of the Nord (where nearly half of all the sugar made in France is produced) is sixteen tons per acre. By actual trial it has been found that 120,000 pounds of beet-root will pro- duce 8,400 pounds of sugar, or seven per cent., and 5,030 pounds of molasses. At this rate an acre of beets of sixteen tons would make 2,240 pounds of sugar, besides molasses. The industry of beet sugar, so far as concerns the vegetable, is essentially agricultural, and this country would appear to combine all the conditions of success. Beet-root sugar was formerly made in occasional instances in different parts of the northern States, but never in such a quantity as to find a place in the returns of the census. Within the last two or three years some attention has been given to the cultivation of the sugar-beet in Ohio and in Illinois. And there seems to be no doubt that sugar can be made in this country from the beet with consider- able profit at present prices. In addition to the sugar and molasses, there is another important item of profit — ^the leaves of the beets and the refuse pulp. Both can be used as food for cattle, and it must be borne in mind that as nothing is removed but sugar, all the manurial elements of the crop are left for the farm. The cultiva- tion of the beet-root, therefore, is one of the very best methods of increasing the fertility of the farm. On this point M. de Lavergne remarks : "It was feared, in the first instance, that the cultivation of the sugar-beet would lessen the production of cattle and wheat by occupying the best land. But this fear was ill-founded, at least relative to the best cultivated regions. It is now demon- strated that the manufacture of sugar, by creating a new source of profit, contributes to increase the other products of the soil. The extraction of the saccharine matter deprives the root of only part of its elements. Its pulp and foliage supply the animals s cii INTRODUCTION. with an abundance of food ; and the returns of the sugar-works enable them to add commercial manures, which indefinitely increase the fertility of the soil. In 1855 the city of Valenciennes, the principal seat of the manufacture, was able to inscribe upon a triumphal arch these significant words : ' Produce of wheat in the arondissement before the manufacture of sugar, 353,000 hectolitres, (961,173 bushels;) number of oxen, 700. Produce of wheat since the manufacture of sugar, 431,000 hectolitres, (1,158 256 bushels;) number of cattle, 11,500.'" The pulp or solid residue amounts to about twenty per cent, of the entire root. When divested of the juice it still contains two or three per cent, of saccharine matter, and is greedily eaten by cattle and pigs, which fatten rapidly upon it. It is said not to be good, however, for milch cows. Ordinary beets and mangel-vrarzel contain sugar, but the Silesian beets alone are cultivated for this purpose. By judicious selection and culture, varieties have been obtained which contain much more sugar than the ordinary variety. In obtaining this result, however, the size of the root has been reduced. M. Knauer, of Grermany, has produced a variety which he names the imperial beet-root, which contains seventeen and a quarter per cent, of sugar. This improvement places the beet on a par with the cane as a sugar- plant, while the cultivator of the beet has several important advantages over the West India and Louisiana planters. The cultivation of the sugar-cane occupies from twelve to fifteen months, and it must all be manufactured in a few days, or great loss ensues. On the other hand, the beet requires but about four months to arrive at maturity, and then it can be stored and manipulated at leisure. We would earnestly recommend this subject to men of capital, and that the business may not be recklessly undertaken we have obtained from Professor H. Dussauce, an enlightened French chemist, at present residing in this country, an account of the beet cultivated for sugar, and the process of manufacture in France, which we subjoin. OF THE BEET-EOOT. The presence of sugar in the beet was observed by Margraif, and Achard, of Berlin, attempted the extraction of this sugar on a large scale ; but it was only during the period of the continental system that the manufacture of sugar from the beet acquired such perfection in France as made it profitable. The beet so generally cultivated at the present time is derived from the beta vulgaris. The two principal varieties of this root are the red beet, which has been grown for a very long time in kitchen gardens, and the white beet. Between these two there are numerous varieties, having a flesh color of various intensity. The seeds of the same plant, in fact, frequently produce varieties of decidedly diiferent shades of color. The red and the white beet, however, appear to be the most constant, and the intermediate varieties are the result of crosses. The first has a large root, which grows in great part above the ground. It is a very hardy plant, and has been cultivated for a very long time in various parts of the continent as food for cattle, and is now very common. The root which has been preferred for the manufacture of sugar is conical, of a rose color without, and its concentric internal layers are also colored ; but it appears that the white beet of Silesia is the more productive. The beet thrives in almost all kinds of soils, provided they be sufficiently manured. In Alsace (east of France) it succeeds in light and in strong argillaceous soils indifferently. Another valuable quality which this root possesses is that of succeeding in the most dissimilar climates. It is grown to advantage both in the north and south of France. The beet is sown at once in the field, or in beds, and transplanted. The latter method appears now to obtain a decided preference, inasmuch as it leaves plenty of time for the preparation of the soil. In a piece of ground well broken up by delving, or ploughing, and highly manured, the seed is sown in lines or drills as soon as the spring frosts are no longer to be apprehended. The transplanting in the east of France takes place about the middle of May, and even in the beginning of June. The plants are generally set about 15 inches apart. In the north the beet harvest does not begin before the end of September, and generally ends in the course of October. The gathering is delayed as long as possible, inasmuch as the root increases visibly to the very end of the season. But gathering the beet INTRODUCTION. ciii at a very late period in those countries where winter grain has to follow this crop is attended with more than one disadvantage. Without speaking of the difficulties that are incidental to wet seasons, a late seed time is generally unfavorable for wheat. To meet this difficulty Boussingault advises to take up the beets at the period when it becomes necessary to prepare the land for winter seed; that is to say, more than a month before the present general harvest of the root. In doing so he relied upon the interesting fact ascertained by Peligot in the course of his chemical researches, viz : that the composition of the beet is identical at every age. In this premature or anticipated beet harvest a less weight of root is of course gathered than would have been obtained at a later period ; but the nutritious power of these roots are the same as they would ever have been. The grand questions to be determined were, whether the root would keep or not, and whether the cattle would eat them from the pile as freely as from the field. All this was ascertained in the course of the winter ; the beet kept perfectly, and the cattle eat it as freely as ever. The procedure to be adopted to secure a crop of beets of average weight some considerable time before the usual period is simply to transplant earlier, but more closely, with less space between the drills. If experience decides in favor of this method, a late and unfavorable seed time for winter grain will be completely obviated. The beet which grows above the ground is best gathered with the hand ; such as grow under ground require to be loosened by running a plough along the drill. In Alsace it is the custom to take away the leaves, and to trim the roots upon the ground ; the refuse thus obtained constitutes a con- siderable mass of manure, which it is well to plough in immediately. Cost of heet culture for lico and a half acres of qood land in France. Eent, taxes, interest $23 00 Manure 26 00 Two ploughings and two harrowiiigs 17 20 . Seeding 3 60 Weeding and delving 7 00 Digging and cartage 7 20' 84 00 The production varies between sixty and ninety thousand pounds, and, consequently, the price of one thousand pounds is from 95 cents to %\ 40. The value of the leaves used as food for cattle saves some accessary expenses. The leaves falling during the vegetation and the small roots left in the ground represent about 9,600 pounds of manure. The leaves taken from the root vary from thirty to thirty-six thousand pounds. These products are worth from $10 to $12. In France the product of each 110 pounds weight of beet is estimated at 4.56, or somewhat more than four and a half pounds of white sugar. The amount of loss in the manufacture may be conceived from the actual composition of the beet, which, by the process followed by Peligot to exhaust the dry root by boiling it with alcohol of moderate density, appears to contain from 4 to 5, up to 9, 10, 11, and nearly 12 per cent, of sugar. The analysis of Peligot has been confirmed by the experiments of Bra- connat, who found the white beet of Silesia to have a very complex composition, as the following table shows : Water 83.5 Sugar 10.5 Cellulose and pectose 0.8 Albumen, casein, and other neutral nitrogenized matters 1.5 Malic and pectic acids, gummy artd fatty matters, aromatic and coloring matters, es- sential oil, &c., &c 3.7 100.0 CIV 1 N T R D U C 1' I N On an average, the analysis of Peligot would lead us to conclude that the beet contained, in 100 parts — Water 87.0 Matters soluble in water, (sugar) 8.0 Matters unsoluble in water 5.0 100.0 From which it appears that no more than about two-fifths of the sugar contained in the beet-root is extracted. As in crushing the cane, so in squeezing the rasped pulp of the beet, a part of the loss is owing to a certain quantity of sugar being left in the express-pulp. In fact, with the presses, whilst from 60 to 70 per cent, of juice is obtained, the root actually contains 95 per cent. The loss here, however, is of less consequence than in the cane, the trash of which is used for fuel, whilst the pulp of the beet serves as food for cattle. The pulp indeed is found to possess very nearly the same amount of nutritive power as the root which produces it. One of the considerations which is of the highest importance in connexion with the production of sugar from the beet is inherent in the difficulty of preserving the root after it is full grown. Gathered at the end of autumn, the root suffers no less from severe frost than it does from mild, open weather ; frost destroys its organization, and in mild winters vegetation continues, at the expense of the sugary principle which had been formed during the growth. If the beet actually contains at every period of its existence the same quantity of sugar, there would, probably, be a great advantage in not waiting for the period of complete maturity, by sowing somewhat thicker than wont, any difference of weight would probably be made up, and then there would be no risk of loss in keeping. The quantity of beet gathered from a given extent of land necessarily varies with the, soil, the pains bestowed upon the crop, and the quantity of manure that has been used The following are a few particulars from official documents : Produce per acre. Tons. Cwt. Qrs. Lbs. Department of the pas de Calais 12 17 -4 " North.. 14 6 1 23 " Cher 15 11 1 But in other departments the produce is considerably smaller; so that the average for the whole of France has been estimated at not more than ten tons, nine hundred weight, one quarter, and thirteen pounds per acre; an average which approaches very closely to that obtained by Boussingault on his own farm during a period of seven years. Assuming four and six-tenths pounds of sugar to be obtained from every 110 pounds of beet, the produce, in sugar, from an acre in the course of seven months will amount to nine hundred weight, three quarters, and twenty-two pounds. An acre of land in sugar-cane yields in fourteen months fifteen hundred weight, one quarter, and ten pounds. To manage one acre of land under beet-root, 45.6 days of a man and 14.1 of a horse was the amount of labor expended. A domain of 360 acres in the south is worked by 150 negroes, which, reckoning the time that the crop is on the ground at fourteen months, would bring the number of days' labor by a man to 177 per acre. Such an expenditure of labor must, in the nature of things, absorb the greater part of the profits, and it was shown that the cost of cultivation and manufacture of cane-sugar was equal to the value of the produce. Still the cane presents one considerable advantage over the beet — namely, thai-^ fur- nishing the fuel necessary to the boiling, an advantage which will be better understood when]it i.s known that in the manufacture of every 100 pounds of beet-sugar the consumption of coal amounjts ti- twenty-two pounds. INTRODUCTION. GV The irapojtance af the fabrication of sugar can be seen in the following table, which indicates the production of this substance throughout the world : Annual production. Bengales, China, Siam 200, 000, 000 pounds. English cuiomes 440, OOO, 000 Spanish " g50, 000, 000 Dutch " 160, 000, 000 Swedish and Danish , 20 000 000 " French colonies 220,000,000 France* 303,000,000 " Belgium 12,000,000 Brazil 350,000,000 United States! 420, 000, 000 " Germany 304,000,000 •• Russia 70,000,000 " TotalJ 3,149,000,000 EXTRACTION OF SUGAR FROM THE BEET. In so important a fabrication we cannot enter into all the particulars, but give an account of the different processes followed in French manufactures. The beets are taken out of the ground when they have acquired their full growth, and are care- fully separated from those which have been injured by the operation. The beets are made into heaps in the field, and covered vsdth leaves until there is danger of frost, when they must be housed or buried in pits. The upper part of the root at the starting point of the stalk is cut oif, because this portion is harder and contains but little sugar. The beets, after being cleansed and washed, are thrown into a machine, which reduces them to as fine a pulp as possible, and breaks up the cells. The pulp is placed in woollen bags laid on each other, and between which metallic plates are introduced; after which the mass is compressed by a screw-press, and the juice ccoUected which flows out, and which constituted about 0.4 of the juice contained. The bags and plates are then placed under the platform of an hydraulic press, which is unscrewed after having maintained the pressure for about ten minutes, when the bags are placed two by two between two plates, and again still more powerfully compressed In this manner 75 to 80 per cent, of beet-root juice may be extracted, only about fifteen parts being left in the pulp. As the juice soon changes, it is essential to raise it as quickly as possible to a high temperature, in order to prevent fermentation, and to saturate with some lime the free acids, which would soon convert a portion of the sugar into glucose. For this purpose the juice on leaving the press is conveyed into a double-bottomed boiler, heated by steam, and the temperature is rapidly raised from 140° to 158° ; afterwards it is conveyed into another boiler, also heated by steam, where the desiccation or treat- ment with lime is efiected. Hydrated lime is usually made by pouring on quicklime ten times its e The fabrication of beet-sugar in France since 1828 to 1836 has raised from 5,330,000 pounds to 90,000,000. From 1837 to 1847 it oscil- lated between sixty-two and one hundred and six millions. Since that time the production has varied between one hundred and twenty-four and one hundred and fifty-four millions. In 1856 France produced 184,000,000, and in 1858, 303,067,000. f Louisiana alone produced, in its 1,400 factories, 280,000,000 pounds of .raw sugar, and more than 150,000,000 gallons of molasses, j: If to this sum we add the quantities consumed in the East Indies and other parts of the world, not enumerated in the above table, we find the quantity to amount to 5,100,494,000 pounds, thus classified : Cane-sugar 2,900,000,000 Beet " 960,000,000 Maple " 40,494,000 Palm " 200,000,000 5,100,494,000 14 cvi INTRODUCTION. weight of boiling water, and when the lime is entirely slacked, passing it over a metallic sieve, which arrests the grains of sand and the now decarbonated portions. The juice is first heated to 167-- in the desiccating boiler, the milk of lime is then added, and the whole is stirred to render the mixture homogeneous; the temperature is raised to 212°, the supply of steam being cut off when ebullition commences. The lime combines with the free acids, the albuminous substanr-es. the fatty and coloring matters, producing insoluble compounds, effecting at the same time a kind of clarification by carrying down with the insoluble compounds organic remains which were suspended in the juice. A thick scum having formed on the surface of the hquid, the latter is kept from boiling in order to prevent its rup- ture by the bubbles of steam. The proportion of lime added varies with the nature of the beet, and with their freshness, only three pounds for one thousand pints of juice being used in the beginning of the season, and with fresh beets, which quantity is gradually increased, and frequently reaches ten pounds before the close of the season. An excess of lime remains in the liquor, and forms a deli- quescent compound with a portion of the sugar. In some factories it has been endeavored to saturate it with a proper quantity of acid. When the operation is terminated, the liquor is drawn off and filtered through animal charcoal ; the filters used for this purpose being large sheet-iron cylinders, having a false bottom pierced with holes like a colander. A cloth is extended over the bottom, over which is spread very coarsely pow- dered animal chalk, added in successive layers until it fills the cylinders to within one and a half foot of the top, when another cloth is laid upon it, and is covered by another metallic plate pierced with holes ; each filter receiving from 6,000 to 8,000 pounds of charcoal. The filters should be kept con- stantly filled with fluid, which is easily done by means of a stop-cock. After this process, by which the juice loses a portion of its coloring matter, and the lime in excess, which adheres to the charcoal, it is conveyed as rapidly as possible into the concentrating boilers, which are generally shallow, and are heated by a circulation of a light pressure of steam through copper tubes arranged over their bottoms. The juice is raised to a temperature of 70° in 10 or 12 minutes. The workman judges by indications understood by experience, if it is properly concentrated, or if the boiling is completed. During the ebullition, which terminates at a temperature of 266° to 275°, a considerable portion of the sugar is altered, and to diminish the loss the evaporation must be effected as rapidly as possible. This opera- tion has been greatly improved by boiling in vacuo — that is, in close boilers, heated by steam, and brought into communication with worms and receivers, in which a vacuum is made. When ebullition takes place at a lower temperature, the quantity of sugar changed is much smaller. When the sirup is properly boiled, it is collected in a cooler, which generally receives the products of five or six boilings, and its temperature then falls to about 176°. Crystallization then commences ; but as soon as any crystals form they are detached from the sides and the sirup stirred to bring them again into suspension. When the temperature has fallen to 130° or 122° the sirup is poured into large conical moulds of metal or baked clay, resting on the point, which is furnished with a hole pre- viously stopped with a plug of wet muslin. The moulds are ranged on long benches with openings, through which the escaping fluids fall into zinc gutters, whence they flow into reservoirs. The tem- perature of the room containing the moulds should be about 86°. Crystallization is completed in about 24 or 36 hours, when the plug is removed from the opening in the mould, and the point of the loaf pierced with an awl so as to draw off the molasses, which is again concentrated even further than the original sirup, and crystallized in moulds. When the molasses is too highly colored, as happens sometimes, it is diluted with a sufficient quantity of water, filtered through animal chalk, concentrated, and recrystallized. The sirup which drains from the second sugar is frequently subjected to the same process for a third time, but the crystallization then requires a great length of time. When the sugar has drained sufficiently, the loaves are loosened — that is, the moulds are inverted and the loaves detached by gentle blows ; after which they are placed in the wareroom, protected from dampness. This is raw beet sugar, which requires refining before being fitted for consumption. INTRODUCTION cvu EEFINING. The process of refining beet-sugar is similar to that of the cane. "We give below the different proportions of substances obtained by refining : One hundred pounds of raw beet-sugar being refined, gv;e the following. Quality of the raw sugar. .S PH ^ i a> >A 02 > Line fourth 52 15 67 15 18 Fourth common 54 16 70 14 16 58 17 75 13 13 Good fourth 60 70 18 16 78 86 10 5 12 Clarified .... 9 COST OF THE MANUFACTURE OF BEET-SUGAR. Cost of producing six hundred thousand pounds of sugar. Ten million pounds of beet-roots cost $13, 000 Labor 4, 200 Fuel 3,600 Lime — animal black Ten per cent, on cost of machinery Five per cent, on cash capital Rents, repairs, and other contingencies . 2, 400 3 000 SOO 4 950 From which deduct one hundred and twenty thousand pounds of molasses, $2, 160 Eesidue, pulp, &c 2, 490 Cost in the factory . Two hundred pounds in the factory, cost . Handling, storage, &c Duty 31, 650 4,650 27, 000 9 GO 3 00 9 90 21 90 Price varies from $22 to $28, say $24 ; profit, $2 1 0. Showing, on six hundred thousand pounds, a profit of $6, 300, or $1 05 per hundred pounds. Time occupied, one hundred days. The cost of producing cane-sugar in this country has generally been estimated at about $3 50 per one hundred pounds. These statements will enable our readers interested in this subject to realize the practicability of making beet-sugar with profit, especially under the new and unfortunate condition of our country. It is not probable that the prices of an article, the use of which is so general, will very soon fall so low as to render the manufacture of sugar from the beet a precarious or hazardous business. Since the foregoing was prepared we find an editorial article on beet-sugar in the "Journal of Commerce," of New York, of November 11, 1864, which concludes as follows: " Beet-sugar is a novelty in this country, but an old story in Europe, where it is manufactured in immense quantities, and daily used on the tables of millions of people. It is sucrose — possessing all the properties of cane-sugar. The white Silesian beet is considered the best, containing a larger proportion of saccharine matter, and a less amount of injurious salts than any other kind. Fresh beet-roots yield from six to seven per cent, of sugar. The method of manufacture is very simple. The beets are cut or rasped into fine pieces, and the juice is then pressed out, or obtained by infusion. Lime-water is added to make it alkaline ; the excess of lime is subsequently removed by a current of carbonic acid gas ; the liquid filtered, evaporated and crvstallized precisely like cane-sugar. Small experiments in the manufacture of beet-sugar have been made in this country with some success. To make it a reasonably cheap product, however, extensive tracts of land, and large outlays for machinery and labor are required. " The public will encourage every efibrt that may be made in this region of discovery and enterprise. The present high prices of sugar afford a good opportunity for talent and capital to develop our latent saccharine resources." CVUl INTRODUCTION HONEY. Of honey, there was produced in 1860 in the United States 23,366,357 pounds, but httle over half the amount of maple sugar. New York produces 2,369,751 pounds, and North Carolina 2,055,969 pounds. These two States produce more honey than any of the others. Kentucky stands third, producing about 1,750,000 pounds. Missouri and Tennessee rank next, producing over 1,500,000 each. Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Ohio each produce nearly 1,500,000 pounds. Illinois and Indiana each produce about 1,250,000 pounds. No other States than these mentioned, produce one million pounds. The census of 1850 did not give the amount of honey separately from beeswax. The total amount of honey and beeswax produced in the United States in 1850 was 14,853,790 pounds, and in 1860 24,689,144 pounds, showing an increase of over 60 per cent. The proportion of honey to beeswax is about one pound of beeswax to seventeen and three-quarters pounds of honey. DOMESTIC ANIMALS. States. Alabama Arkansas California Conueoticut Delaware Florida Georgia Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts . . Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri New Hampshire. New Jersey New York North Carolina . Ohio Oregon Pennsylvania Ehode Island South Carolina... Tennessee Texas Vermont Virginia Wisconsin 1 w Total States . 127, 063 140, 198 160,610 33, 276 16,562 13,446 130,771 563,736 520,677 175,088 20, 344 355,704 78,703 60,637 93,406 47,786 136,917 17, 065 117,571 361,874 41, 101 79,707 503,725 150,661 625, 346 36,772 437,654 7,121 81, 125 290,882 325,698 69, 071 287,579 116, 180 6,824,056 111,687 57, 358 3,681 82 2,294 10, 901 101, 069 38, 539 28, 893 5,734 1,496 117,634 91,762 104 9,829 108 330 377 110,723 80,941 10 6,362 1,553 51,388 7,194 980 8,832 10 56,456 126, 345 63, 334 43 41,015 1,030 a 1,138,103 88, 316 78, 707 26,204 47, 939 9,530 7,361 74,487 90, 380 117, 687 56,964 21,551 108, 999 60,358 79,792 34,524 38,221 61, 686 27,568 105,603 166,588 51,512 10, 067 121,703 48,511 63, 078 7,469 60, 371 7,857 22,629 102, 158 172,492 24, 639 97,872 93, 652 1 s 2,204,275 230, 537 171, 003 205, 407 98, 877 22,595 92, 974 299,688 522,634 363,563 189, 802 28,550 269,215 129, 662 147, 314 99,463 144,492 179, 543 40, 344 207,646 345,243 94, 880 138,818 1,123,634 228,623 676,585 53, 170 673,547 19,700 163,938 249,514 601,540 174, 667 330,713 203, 001 O 8,516,872 454,543 318, 089 948,731 95, 091 25, 596 287,725 631,707 970,799 588, 144 293, 322 43, 354 457, 845 326,787 149,827 119,254 97,201 238,615 51, 345 416, 660 657, 153 118, 075 89, 909 727,837 416, 676 895,077 93, 492 685,575 11,548 320,209 413, 060 2,761,736 153, 144 615, 882 225,207 14, 699, 215 370, 156 202,753 1,088,002 117, 107 18,857 30, 158 512,618 769, 135 991, 175 259, 041 17,569 938,990 181,253 452,472 155,765 114, 829 1,271,743 13, 044 352, 632 937, 445 310,534 135,228 2,617,855 546,749 3,546,767 86, 052 1,631,540 32,624 233,509 773, 317 753, 363 752,201 1,043,269 332, 954 21,590,706 1,748,321 1, 171, 630 456, 396 75, 120 47, 848 271, 74C 2,036,119 2, 502, 308 3,099,110 934,820 138,224 2,330,595 634,525 54,783 387, 756 73,948 372, 386 101, 371 1,532,768 2,354,425 51,935 236, 089 910, 178 1,883,214 2,251,653 81,615 1,031,266 17,478 965,779 2,347,321 1,371,532 52,912 1,599,919 334,055 33,459,138 INTRODUCTION. Domestic animals — Continued. CIX «44 ■r^ 'Z 1^ s 'o S 1 t^ Territories. a o g a 1 1 a n3 fe ji g s a o ^ a a ~ d o a ." GO 'S. ^ a 0) a < I,/ 1 ' ■3 o S ■ 02 District of Columbia 641 122 69 639 198 40 1,099 Dakota 84 19 348 286 167 193 287 Nebraska 4,449 541 469 12, 594 620 6,995 947 17, 608 3,904 29,094 12,959 16,228 2,355 25, 369 Nevada 134 376 3,571 New Mexico . 10, 066 4,565 4,772 11,291 851 25,266 9,168 2,571 34,369 11,967 9,660 830, 116 10, 313 Utah 37, 332 6,707 159 10, 157 6,383 Total Territories 25, 118 13, 045 50,636 64,863 80, 158 880,569 53,729 Afirsrreffate ...... ...... 6,249,174 1, 151, 148 2,254,911 8,581,735 14,779,373 22,471,275 33,512,867 In our review of the tables of live-stock we have confined ourselves to the official returns, which include for the mofet part the domestic animals connected with the agriculture. of, the country. By such a course only can we institute those comparative examinations from which alone can be determined the progress or decline of any interests involved in the census. The amount of live-stock scattered throughout cities and large towns, whieh escaped the official record, was known to be very considerable in the aggregate; and, to be enabled to arrive at some close approximation thereof, we directed each .of the census takers to make return of the numbers of animals in his district believed to have been omitted on his schedules. The summary of these returns will be found in a table at page 192, the details of which may safely be added to the numbers in the official tables immediately preceding to those of the several State tables, and to those given in the present commentary, by such as desire to arrive at the fullest numbers for 1860, while they should be excluded from exhibits from which we would prepare comparative statements. To have embodied the numbers of the table referred to with the official return, or to have included them in this review, would have lessened the means of com- parison, and led to erroneous conclusions as to the progress of this branch of agricultural production, having been omitted, as they were, in the previous census. HOESES. There were in the States and Territories 4,336,719 horses in 1850, and 6,249,174 in 1860. The following table shows the number of horses in the New England States in i860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Connecticut 33, 276 26, 879 Maine 60, 637 41, 721 New Hampshire 41, 101 34, 233 Massachusetts 47, 786 42, 216 Rhode Island 7, 121 6, 168 Vermont 69, 071 61, 057 Total 258, 992 212, 274 Vermont has more horses than any other New England State. Maine comes next, and then in order succeed Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Connecticut. There were 212,274 horses in the New England States in 1850, and 258,992 in 1860, showing an increase of nearly 47,000. ex INTRODUCTION. The following table shows the number of horses in the middle States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. New York 503, 725 447, 014 New Jersey 79, 707 63, 955 Pennsylvania 437, C54 350, 398 Delaware 16, 562 13, 852 Maryland 93, 406 75, 684 District of Columbia 641 824 Total 1, 131, 695 951, 727 There are a little over 1,000,000 horses in the middle States. New York has about 500,000 and Pennsylvania only about 60,000 less than New York. Maryland has about 93,500, and New Jersey nearly 80,000. The following table shows the number of horses in the western States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Illinois 563, 736 267, 653 Indiana 520, 677 314, 299 Iowa 175, 088 38, 536 Kansas 20, 344 Kentucky 355, 704 315, 682 Michigan 136, 917 58, 506 Minnesota 17, 065 860 Missouri 361, 874 225, 319 Ohio 625, 346 463, 397 Wisconsin 116, 180 30, 179 Nebraska 4, 449 Total 2, 897, 380 1, 714, 431 There were 1,714,431 horses in the western States in 1850, and 2,897,380 in 1860, an increase of over 1,000,000. Ohio has more horses than any other western State, or 625,346, Illinois and Indiana have each over 500,000; Missouri 361,874, and Kentucky 355,704. These five States have over 2,500,000 horses, while all the other western States have less than 500,000. The following table shows the number of horses in the southern States in 1860, as compared with 1850: I860. 1850. Alabama. 127, 063 128, 001 Arkansas ^- 140, 198 60, 107 Florida ! 13, 446 10, 848 Georgia 130, 771 151, 331 Louisiana 78, 703 89, 514 Mississippi 117, 571 115, 460 North Carolina 150, 661 148, 693 South Carolina 81, 125 97, 171 Tennessee 290, 882 70, 636 Texas 325, 698 76, 760 Virginia 287,579 , 272,403 Total 1, 743, 697 1, 421, 014 There are less than one and three-fourths million horses in the southern States. Of these over one-sixth are in Texas, and nearly one-sixth in Tennessee. Virginia stands third, having 287,579 horses. There are more horses in Texas, Tennessee, and Virginia, than in all the other southern States together. INTRODUCTION. cxi The fqllowing table shows the number of horses in the Pacific States in 1860, as compared with 1850: I860. 1850. California 160, 610 21, 719 Oregon 36, 772 8, 046 New Mexico 10, 066 5, 079 Utah 4, 565 2, 429 Washington 4^ 772 Total 216, 785 37, 273 There are 216,785 horses in the Pacific States. Of this number GaLifornia has 160,610. The following table shows the number of inhabitants to each horse in the different sections of the United States in 1860 and in 1850; I860. 1850. New England States 12.10 12.85 Middle States 7.36 2.96 Western States 3 54 2.50 Southern States 5.33 5.04 Pacific States 2.54 4.79 United States and Territories 5.03 5.34 In the United States there were in 1850 one hundred horses to every 534 inhabitants, and in 1860 one hundred horses to every 508 persons. In the New England States there were only one hundred horses to every 1285 inhabitants in 1850, and one hundred horses to every 1210 inhabitants in 1860. In other words, the increase in the number of horses in the New England States has fully kept pace with the increase in population. In the middle States there were 696 persons to every one hundred horses in 1850, and 736 in 1860. The increase in the number of horses does not keep pace with the increase in population. It will be seen, however, that there are nearly double the number of horses in proportion to population in the middle States than in the New England States. In the western States there were in 1850 one hundred horses to every 250 inhabitants, and in 1860 one hundred horses to every 354 inhabitants. In 1850 every family of five persons, on the average, in the western States owned a team ; since then the increase in the population has been much greater than the increase in the number of horses. Even now, however, there are two horses to every seven inhabitants. In the southern States there is about one horse to every five inhabitants. There are more horses in the Pacific States, in proportion to population, than in any other section. There are now about two horses to every five persons, or about the same proportion as there was in the west in 1850. There are now nearly double the number of horses in the Pacific States in pro- portion to population than there was in 1850. ASSES AND MULES. The total number of asses and mules in the States and Territories in 1860 was 1,151,148 ; and in 1850, 559,331, showing an increase of over 100 per cent. The following table shows the number of asses and mules in the New England States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : ^ I860. 1850. Maine 104 65 New Hampshire 10 19 Vermont 43 218 Massachusetts 108 34 Ehode Island - - - - 10 1 Connecticut S2 49 Total _357 _376 There were but 376 asses and mules in the New England States in 1850 ; and small as is this number, there were even still less in 1860, or only 357. cxU INTRODLOTION. In 1850 Vermont had 218, but in 1860 only 43. In Massachusetts, on the other hand, there were 34 in 1850, and 108 in 1860. In Maine, Rhode Island, and Connecticut, there is also an increase. But it is very evident that the mules are not a favorite working animal in the New England States. The following table shows the number of asses and mules in the middle States in 1860, as com- pared with 1850: I860. 1850. New York 1, 553 963 Pennsylvania 8, 832 2, 259 New Jersey 6, 362 4, 089 Delawaie 2, 294 791 Maryland : 9,829 5,644 District of Columbia , - - 122 57 Total 28, 992 13, 803 There were in the middle States 13,803 asses and mules in 1850, and 28,992 in 1860, an increase of over 100 per cent. Maryland, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey employ mules to a considerable extent, but as yet in New York they have not generally been introduced, though they are on the increase. In Pennsylvania and New Jersey they are used principally in the mining districts; while Mary- land adopts, to some extent, the southern system of agriculture, in which mules are more generally used than at the north. The following table shows the number of asses and mules in the western States in 1860, as com- pared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Indiana , 28, 893 6, 599 Illinois 38, 539 10, 573 Ohio 7, 194 3, 423 Michigan 330 70 Missouri 80, 941 41, 667 Kentucky 117, 634 65, 609 Wisconsin 1, 030 156 Iowa 5, 734 754 Minnesota 377 14 Kansas 1, 496 Nebraska ' 469 Total 282, 637 129, 865 There were in the western States, in 1850, 129,865 asses and mules, and in 1860, 282,637, show- ing an increase of over 115 per cent. Kentucky has more mules than any other western State, and Missouri comes next. These two States have more than twice as many asses and mules as all the other western States. In Illinois and Indiana mules are being extensively introduced, and the same is true of Iowa. Thte following table shows the number of asses and mules in the southern States in 1860, as com- ' pared with 1850: I860. 1850. Alabama HI, 687 59, 895 Arkansas 57, 358 11, 559 Florida 10, 910 5, 002 Georgia lOi, 069 57, 379 Louisiana 91, 762 44, 849 Mississippi 110, 723 54, 547 North Carolina 51, 388 25, 259 South Carolina 56, 456 37, 483 Tennessee 126, 335 75, 303 Texas 63, 334 12, 463 Virginia 41,015 21,483 Total 822, 047 405, 222 INTRODUCTION. cxiii There were in the southern States in 1850 405,222 asses and mules, and 822,047 in 1860. If we add Kentucky, Missouri, and Maryland to the southern States, we then have 1,030,451; while all the other States and Territories have only 120,697 asses and mules. The following table shows the number of asses and mules in the Pacific States in 1860, as com- pared with 1850: I860. 1850 California 3, 681 1, 666 Oregon 980 420 New Mexico 11, 291 8, 654 Utah 851 325 Washington 159 Total 16, 962 11, 065 Asses and mules are used to a considerable extent in the Pacific States, but more especially in New Mexico. In all the States and Territories there were in 1850 one ass or mule to every 41 inhabitants; and in 1860 one to every 27 inhabitants. In the middle States there was one to every 480 inhabitants in 1850, and one to 298 in 1860. In the western States there was one to every 48 inhabitants in 1850, and one to 36 in 1860. In the southern States there was one to every 18 inhabitants in 1850, and one to every 11 inhabi- tants in 1860. In the Pacific States there was one to every 16 inhabitants in 1850, and only one to every 32 in> habitants in 1860. In all the sections except the New England and Pacific States, the increase in asses and mules has been much greater than the increase in population. It is claimed that a good, well-bred mule will do as much work as a horse, while it can be kept at one-third less expense. Mules are liable to fewer diseases than horses, and will bear ill treatment better. For careless hands they are more profitable than horses, and the high prices which they bring, and the rapidly increasing demand for them, shows that the prejudice against them is not as great as formerly. The active life of a mule is about double that of horses. They require less than half the expense for shoeing. It is claimed that an average lot of mules can be disposed of more readily and at better prices than an average lot of horses; and that, as they cost less to feed, and can be worked a year earlier, they are a more profitable stock to raise. WOEIiING OXEN. The total number of working oxen in the States and Territories, in 1850, was 1,700,744, and in 1860, 2,254,911 ; an increase of 32 per cent. The following table shows the number of working oxen in the New England States in 1860, as compared with 1850: I860. 1850. Connecticut 47, 939 46, 988 Rhode Island 7, 857 8, 189 Massachusetts 38, 221 46, 111 Vermont 42, 639 48, 577 New Hampshire 51, 512 59, 027 Maine 79, 792 83, 893 Total 267, 960 292, 785 Excepting Connecticut, the number of working oxen has decreaised in all the New England States since 1850. There were 292.78/^ 'n 1850. and only 267.960 in 1860— a decrease of 24.825 in ten years. 15 cxiv INTRODUCTION. The following table shows the number of working oxen in the middle States in 1860, as compared with 1850: I860. 1850. New York 121, 703 178, 909 New Jersey 10, 067 12, 070 Pennsylvania 60, 371 61, 627 Delaware 9, 530 9, 797 Maryland 1 34, 524 34, 135 District of Columbia 69 104 Total 236, 264 296, 542 In the middle States also there is a decrease of 60,278 working oxen since 1850. Of this de- crease 57,206 is in the State of New York. The following table shows the number of working oxen in the western States in 1860, as com- pared with 1850: I860. 1850. Illinois 90, 380 76, 156 Indiana 117, 687 40, 221 Michigan 61, 686 55, 350 Missouri 166, 588 112, 168 Ohio 63, 078 65, 381 Iowa 56, 964 21, 892 Wisconsin 93, 652 42, 801 Minnesota 27, 568 655 Kansas 21, 551 Kentucky 108, 599 62, 274 Nebraska 12, 594 Total 820, 347 476, 898 Here we have a decided increase since 1850 — an increase of over 70 per cent. There is an increase of working oxen in every western State except Ohio, where there is a decrease of over 2,303, Ohio, in its agriculture, approximates more closely to the middle than to the western States, and the fact that there is a deciease in the older States shows, what we may well suppose to be the case, that oxen are found more useful in a new country than ip one where a higher system of agriculture is ado|)ted. The following table shows the number of working oxen in the southern States in 1860, as com- pared with 1850: I860. 1850. Alabama 88, 316 66, 961 Arkansas 78, 707 34, 231 Florida 7, 361 5, 794 Georgia 74, 487 73, 286 Mississippi 105, 603 83, 485 Louisiana 60, 358 64, 968 North Carolina 48, 611 37, 309 South Carolina 22, 629 20, 507 Tennessee 102, 158 86, 255 Texas 172, 492 51, 285 Virginia 97, 872 89, 513 Total 858, 494 603, 594 There is an increase of working oxen in each one of the southern States. There were in the aggregate 858,494 in the southern States in 1860, against 603,594 in 1850, an increase of over 40 per cent. INTRODUCTION. cxv The following table shows the number of working oxen in the Pacific States in 1860, as com- pared with 1850 : I860. California 26, 004 Oregon 7, 469 New Mexico 25, 266 Washington Territory 2, 571 Utah 9, 168 Total 70, 478 1850. 4,780 8,114 12, 257 5,266 30, 417 There is a greater increase in the Pacific States than in any other section — an increase of nearly 130 per cent. Oregon shows a slight decrease, while California has increased from 4,780 in 1850, to 26,004 in 1860. There is also a marked increase in New Mexico, though far less than in California. The following table shows the number of working oxen to each hundred inhabitants in the different sections, and also in the States and Territories : I860. 1850. 10 4 8 7 16 7 New England States 8 Middle States 2 Southern States 9 "Western States • 8 Pacific States 12 United States and Territories 6 In the New England States there were ten working oxen to each hundred inhabitants in 1850, and only eight in 1860. In the middle States there were four in 1850, and only two to each hundred inhabitants in 1860. In the western States there were seven in 1850, and eight in 1860. In the southern States there were eight in 1850, and nine in 1860. In the Pacific States there were sixteen in 1850, and twelve in 1860. In the States and Territories there were seven working oxen to every hundred inhabitants in 1850, and six in 1860. The Pacific States have more working oxen in proportion to population than any other section. The southern States come next, then the western and New England States, where the number is the same, and the middle States come last, where there is only one-fourth as many as in New England. and the west. MIIiCH COWS AND OTHER CATTLE. The number of milch cows in the States and Territories, in 1860, was 8,581,735, against 6,385,094 in 1850 — an increase of over 33 per cent. Of "other cattle," not including working oxen, there were in 1860 14,779,373, against 10,293,069 in 1850 — an increase of over 43 per cent. The following table shows the number of milch cows and of "other cattle" in the New England States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : States. Maine New Hampshire Vermont Massachusetts ■ ■ Bhode Island... Connecticut Total Milch cows. 1860. 147, 314 94, 880 174, 667 144, 493 19,700 98,»r7 679, 930 1850. 133, 556 94, 277 146, 128 130, 099 18,698 85.461 608,219 Other cattle. 1860. 149,827 118, 075 153, 144 97,201 11,548 95, 091 624, 886 1850. 125,890 114,606 154, 143 83,284 9,375 80,226 567, 524 CXVl INTRODUCTION. There were 679,930 milch cows in the New England States in 1860, against 608,219 in 1850; showing an increase of over 70,000. Of " other cattle," not including working oxen, there were 624,886 in 1860, against 567,524 in 1850, showing an increase of over 40,000. Milch cows have increased about 14,000 in Maine, 14,400 in Massachusetts, 13,400 in Connecticut, and over 28,500 in Vermont. In " other cattle " there has been a shght faUing off in Vermont. It is evident that the dairy is attracting more attention in this State than feeding cattle for beef. In Maine, on the other hand, there is an increase of about 24,000 ; in New Hampshire, an increase of about 3,500 ; in Rhode Island, an increase of about 2,200 ; in Massachusetts, an increase of about 14,000 ; and in Connecticut, an increase of nearly 15,000. The following table shows the number of milch cows and " other cattle " in the middle States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : states. New York New Jersey Pennsylvania Delaware Maryland District of Columbia Total.... Milch cows. 1860. 1,123,634 138,818 673, 547 22, 595 99, 463 639 2, 058, 696 1850. 931, 324 118,736 530,224 19,248 86, 856 813 1,687,201 Other cattle. 1860. 727, 837 89, 909 685,575 25,596 119,254 198 1,648,369 1850. 767,406 80,445 562, 195 24, 166 98,595 123 1,532,930 The total number of milch cows in the middle States in 1860 was 2,058,696, against 1,687,201 in 1850 ; an increase of over 370,000. More than half the milch cows of the middle States are in the State of New York. This was also the case in 1850. Pennsylvania has but little over half as many milch cows as New York, but the rate of increase is as great since 1850 as in the latter State. Of " other cattle " there were 1,648,369 in the middle States in 1860, against 1,532,930 in 1850, showing an increase of over 115,000. In New York there has been a decrease in this class of stock of about 40,000, while in Pennsylvania there is an increase of over 123,000. The following table shows the number of milch cows and " other cattle " in the western States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : States Milch cows. Other cattle. 1860. 1850. 1860. 1850. 522,634 363,553 189,802 28,550 269,215 345,243 179,543 40, 344 203,001 6,995 676,585 294,671 284,554 45,704 970,799 588, 144 293, 322 43,354 457, 845 657, 153 238,615 51,345 225,207 17,608 895, 077 541,209 389,891 69,025 Iowa ...... Kansas Kentucky 247,475 230, 169 99, 676 607 64,339 442,763 449,173 119,471 740 76,293 Missouri Minnesota Wisconsin - __.. Nebraska Ohio 544,499 749, 067 Total 2,825,465 1,811,694 4,438,469 2,837,632 INTRODUCTION. cxvu There were 2,825,465 milch cows in the western States in 1860, against 1,811,694 in 1850; showing an increase of more than 1,000,000, or over 55 per cent. Minnesota has increased from 607 in 1850 to over 40,000 in 1860; Iowa, from less than 46,000 to nearly 190,000 in the same period. Of "other cattle," there were 4,438,469 in the western States in 1860, against 2,837,632 in 1850 — an increase of more than 1,600,000, or over 56 per cent. Iowa has increased from 69,000 to over 293,000, and Minnesota from only 740 to 51,000. Wisconsin from 76,000 to 225,000. Kansas, which was unreported in 1850, gives over 43,000 in 1860. The following table shows the number of milch cows and " other cattle " in the southern States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : states. Milch cows. Other cattle. 1860. 1850. 1860. 1850. Alabama . 230,537 171,003 299,688 92, 974 129,662 207, 646 228,623 163, 938 249,514 601,540 330,713 227,791 93, 151 334,233 72,876 105,576 214,232 221,799 195,244 250, 456 217,811 317,619 454,543 318, 089 631,707 287,725 326, 787 416, 660 416,676 320,209 413, 060 2,761,736 615, 882 433,263 165 320 Arkansas Georgia! 690, 019 182,415 414,798 436,254 434,402 563,935 414, 051 661,018 Florida Louisiana Mississippi _ North Carolina .. . South Carolina Tennessee Texas Virginia 669, 137 Total 2,705,838 2,248,788 6,963,074 5, 064, 612 There were 2,705,838 milch cows in the southern States in 1860, against 2,248,788 in 1850 — an increase of over 457,000, or about 20 per cent. There has been a slight decrease in the number of milch cows in Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina, and Tennessee. While Texas has increased from less than 218,000 in 1850 to over 600,000 in 1860; Arkansas has also increased from 93,000 to 171,000. There has been a slight increase in all the other southern States. Of "other cattle," there were in the southern States 6,963,074 in 1860, against 5,064,612 in 1850; being an increase of nearly 2,000,000, or nearly 40 per cent , being double the percentage increase in milch cows. The most remarkable increase is in Texas. There were 2,761,736 in 1860, against 661,018 in 1850, or an increase of over 2,000,000. With the exception of Texas, and Florida, and Alabama, and Arkansas, there has been a decrease of this class of cattle in all the southern States. Next to Texas, Georgia has more cattle than any other southern State ; Virginia coming next. The following table shows the number of milch cows and " other cattle " in the Pacific States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : States. California Oregon New Mexico Utah "Washington Territory Total Milch cows. 1860. 205, 407 53, 170 34, 369 11,967 9,660 314,573 1850. 4,280 9,427 10, 035' 4,861 29,203 Other cattle. 1860. 948,731 93, 492 29, 094 12,959 16,228 1,100,504 1850. 253,599 24,188 10,085 2,489 290, 361 cxvm INTRODUCTION There were 314,573 milch cows in the Pacific States in 1860, against 29,203 in 1850, being an increase of over 97.5 per cent. Tlie main increase is in California. Of "other cattle" there were 1,100,504 in 1860, against 290,361 in 1850, or an increase of nearly 300 per cent. The following table shows the number of milch cows and " other cattle " to every 100 persons in the different sections, and in the whole United States and Territories : New England States Middle States Western States Southern States Pacific States United States and Territories Milch cows. Other cattle.* 1860. 1850. 1860. 1850. 21 22 19 20 24 25 19 23 27 28 45 43 29 30 75 60 56 16 199 106 27 27 47 44 It is somewhat remarkable that the number of milch cows, in proportion to population, should be precisely the same in 1860 as in 1850 in all the States and Territories. By reference to the table (page Ixxxv,) showing the amount of butter and cheese produced, in proportion to population, it will be seen that there were 17.62 pounds of butter and cheese to each inhabitant in 1850, and 17.97 pounds in 1860. In the New England States there were 21 cows to each 100 persons in 1860, against 22 in 1850. In the middle States there were 24 milch cows to each 100 persons in 1860, against 25 in 1850. In the western States there were 27 milch cows to each 100 persons in 1860, and 28 in 1850. In the southern States there were 29 milch cows to every 100 persons in 1860, against 30 in 1850. In the Pacific States there were 56 milch cows to each 100 persons in 1860, against 16 in 1850. From the smallest ^lumber of cows in 1850, in proportion to population, the Pacific States have risen to the highest in 1860. There are now more than two cows to every family of five persons, and yet, as will be seen by the table showing the amount of butter in proportion to population, there is less than eight and three-quarter pounds of butter, and a little over three pounds of cheese produced to each person. Of "other cattle" there were in the New England States 20 head to each 100 persons in 1850, and 19 head in 1860. In the middle States there were 23 head in 1850, and 19 head in 1860. In the western States there were 43 head in 1850, and 45 head in 1860. In the southern States there were 69 head in 1850, and 75 head in 1860. In the Pacific States there were 106 head in 1850, and 199 in 1860. In the whole United States and Territories there were 44 head to every 100 persons in 1850, and 47 head in 1860. It will be observed that there are far more cattle, in proportion to population, in the Pacific States, than in any other section. The southern States come next. The western States stand third ; the number in which, however, is far less, in proportion to population, than in the southern States. In the middle and New England States in 1860, the numbers are precisely the same — 19 head in both cases. There are more than twice as many cattle, in proportion to population, in the western States than in the middle and New England States; and in the southern States nearly four times as many. In the New England and middle States the number of cattle, in proportion to population, has decreased since 1850, and, what is somewhat remarkable, more in the middle States than in the New England States. * Meaning cattle not enumerated as "milch cows" or "working oxen." INTRODUCTION. CXIX Taking the western, New England, and middle States together, the increase in the number of cattle has not kept pace with the increase in the population ; but it is more than probable that from the introduction of improved breeds, which mature earlier and fatten more readily, there has been no falling off in the supply of beef, in proportion to population, since 1850. The following table shows the amount of butter and cheese obtained from each cow in the dif- ferent sections in 1860, as compared with 1850, and in the whole United States and Territories : Butter. Cheese. Total butter and cheese. 1860. 1850. 1860. 1850. 1860. 1850. New England States Middle States 75 87 58 23 15 53 72 80 49 19 10 49 32 25 10 5 12 44 31 13 1% 24 16 107 112 68 23 20 65 lie 111 Western States Southern States ...... ...... 62 19 12i United States and lenitories . 65 Taking the whole United States and Territories together, there were 53 pounds of butter obtained from each cow in 1860, against 49 pounds in 1850 ; and of cheese, 12 pounds in 1860, and 16 pounds in 1850. Of butter and cheese together, there were 65 pounds from each cow in 1860, and precisely the same amount in 1850. When we consider that a good cow, properly fed, will produce 500 pounds of butter and cheese in a year, these figures do not appear favorable. In the New England States 75 pounds of butter was obtained from each covp^ in 1860, and 72 in 1850; and of cheese, 32 pounds in 1860, against 44 pounds in 1850; showing an increase of three pounds of butter to each cow, and a decrease of twelve pounds of cheese. The total product of butter and cheese being 116 pounds in 1850, and only 107 pounds in 1860 — a falling off of nine pounds per cow. In the middle States there were 87 pounds of butter obtained from each cow in 1860, against 80 pounds in 1850. Of cheese there were 25 pounds in 1860, and 31 in 1850. In the middle States, as in the New England States, there is a falling off in the production of cheese per cow, but not quite as great as the increase in butter. The total amount of butter and cheese being 112 pounds in 1860, against 111 in 1850; being an increase of one pound per cow. In the western States there were 58 pounds of butter obtained from each cow in 1860, against 49 in 1850; showing an increase of nine pounds per cow. Of cheese there were 13 pounds per cow in 1850, and only 10 pounds in 1860; a decrease of three pounds per cow. The total product of butter and cheese was 68 pounds per cow in 1860, against 62 pounds in 1850; an increase of six pounds per cow. In the southern States there were 22 pounds of butter obtained from each cow in 1860, against 19 pounds in 1850. Of cheese there were 6 ounces per cow in 1850, and only 5 ounces per cow in 1860. In the Pacific States there were 15 pounds of butter obtained from each cow in 1860, against 10 pounds in 1850, and 5 pounds of cheese in 1860, against 2^ in 1850. The total product per cow, of butter and cheese, being 20 pounds in 1860, against 12^ in 1850. THE CATTLE DISEASE.— PZcaro Pneumonia. This disease, so fatal in Europe, appeared in this country in 1859. It was brought to Massa- chusetts by three cows imported from Holland. The disease soon spread, and many valuable herds cxx .INTRODUCTION. < were decimated. Great alarm was felt, not only in the New Englandand middle States, but through' out the west. A special session of the legislature of Massachusetts was called, and SlOO,000 appropriated for the employment of measures calculated to arrest the spread of the disease. The most important of which was, in brief, as follows : Cattle which are infected, or have been exposed to in- fection, shall be enclosed in a suitable place and kept isolated ; the expense of their maintenance to be defrayed, one-fifth by the town and four-fifths by the State. The cattle may be killed at the discre- tion of the constituted authorities, and their value paid to the owners. The same authorities may also prohibit the departure of cattle from any enclosure, and also exclude cattle therefrom. They can also prohibit the passage of cattle through the town or city, or of bringing them into it. All cattle that are diseased or have been exposed to the infection, to be marked on the rump with the letter P ; and no animal so branded shall be sold or disposed of without the consent of the authorities. All who know, or have reason to suspect, of the existence of the disease among their cattle must give notice of the fact to the authorities. In addition to the local authorities, three persons are appointed as commissioners, to examine into the nature of the disease, to attend the hospitals or quarantine stations, and to make a report of them to the governor and council. These measures were eminently successful; the disease was speedily arrested, and, from all we can learn from the official accounts, not more than 500 animals died from the disease. In addition to this, 657 animals that had been exposed to contagion were killed, but on post- mortem examination found to be sound; 185 animals were killed that proved to be diseased. One fact seems to be clearly established, that the disease is contagious, and the only sure preventive is to isolate the aifected cattle. The disease is not entirely new in this country. It broke out in the herd of E. P. Prentice, esq., of Mount Hope, near Albany, New York, in 1854. Sixteen animals were affected, fourteen of which died. The disease does not seem at that time to have spread in the neighborhood, and this case at- tracted no general attention until it broke out in Massachusetts in 1859. SHEEP. The total number of sheep in the United States in 1860 was 22,471,275, against 21,723.220 in 1850; showing an increase of only 748,055. The following table shows the number of sheep in the New England States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Connecticut 117, 107 174? 181 Maine 452, 472 451, 577 Massachusetts 114, 829 188, 651 New Hampshire 310, 534 384, 756 Rhode Island 32, 624 44, 296 Vermont 752, 201 1, 004, 122 Total 1, 779, 757 2, 247, 583 The total number of sheep in the New England States was 2,247,583 in 1850, and 1,779,767 in 1860, showing a decrease of 467,816. In 1850 Vermont had 1,004,122 sheep, and in 1860 752,*^01, being a decrease of 251,921. Maine had 456,577 in 1850, and 452,472 in 1860, showing an increase of nearly one thousand. Maine is the only New England State in which there has been any increase since 1850. It may be interesting to mention that Vermont had 1,681,819 sheep in 1840, so that since that date the number of sheep in this State has fallen off more than one-half. In Maine also, though there has been a slight increase since 1850, there is a marked decrease since 1840, at which time there were 649,264 sheep, against 452,472 in 1860. In New Hampshire there has been an equally great falling off" since 1840. In Connecticut the decrease is still greater. In the aggregate the number of INTRODUCTION. cxxi sheep in the New England States has fallen off from 3,442,081 in 1840, to 2,247,583 in 1850, and to 1,779,767 in 1860. In other words, the number of sheep in the New England States has fallen off nearly one-half since 1840. The following table shows the number of sheep in the middle States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Delaware 18, 857 27, 503 Maryland 155, 765 177, 902 New York 2, 617, 855 3, 453, 241 New Jersey 135, 228 160, 488 Pennsylvania 1, 631, 540 1, 822, 357 District of Columbia 40 150 Total 4, 559, 285 5, 641, 641 The total number of sheep in the middle States in 1850 was 5,641,641, and 4,559,285 in 1860, showing a decrease of 1,082,356. In 1840 there were 7,402,851 sheep in the middle States, showing a decrease from that time to 1860 of nearly three million. In New York in 1840 there were 5,118,777 sheep, in 1850 3,453,241, and 2,617,855 in 1860. The following table shows the number of sheep in the western States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Illinois 769, 135 894, 043 • Indiana 991, 175 1, 122, 493 - Iowa 250, 041 149, 960 Kansas 17,569 Kentucky 938, 990 1, 102, 091 . Michigan 1, 271, 743 746, 435 Minnesota 13,044 80 Missouri -^ 937, 445 762, 511 Ohio 3, 546, 767 '3, 942, 929 • Wisconsin 332, 954 124, 896 Nebraska ^ 2, 355 Total 9, 071, 218 8, 845, 438 In 1850 there were 8,845,438 sheep in the western States, and 9,071,218 in 1860, showing an increase of about 225,000. In 1840 there were in the western States 4,574,747 sheep, showing that while the increase has been shght since 1850, it has been very large since 1840, precisely the reverse of that which has taken place in the New England and middle States. In Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, and Ohio, there has been a decrease in the number of sheep since 1850. The increase has been confined to the newer States. The following table shows the number of sheep in the southern States in 1860, as compared with 1850: I860. 1850. Alabama 370,156 371,880 Arkansas 202, 753 91, 256 Florida 30,158 23,311 Georgia 512, 618 560, 435 Mississippi 352, 632 304, 929 North Carolina 546, 749 595, 249 South Carolina - - ■ 233, 609 285, 551 Tennessee -■ ■ 773,317 811,591 Texas 753, 363 100, 530 Louisiana 181, 253 110, 333 Virginia 1. 043, 269 1, 310, 004 Total 4,999,777 4, 565, 069 16 cxxii INTRODUCTION. In 1850 there were 4,565,069 slieep in the southern States, and in 1860 4,999,777, showing an increase of 434,708. In 1840 there were in the southern States 3,512,767 sheep, showing an increase since that time of nearly 1,500,000. In Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia, there was a decrease in the number of sheep between 1850 and 1860. As a general rule it may be said that the number of sheep has declined in all the older States since 1850. The following table shows the number of sheep in the Pacific States in 1860, as compared with 1850: I860. 1850. California 1, 088, 002 17, 574 Oregon 86, 052 15, 382 New Mexico 830, 116 377, 271 Utah , 37, 332 . 3, 262 Washington 10, 157 Total 2, 051, 659 413, 489 In 1850 the total number of sheep in the Pacific States was 413,489, and in 1860 2,051,659; showing an increase of 1,638,170. California alone has increased 1,000,000. Taking the New England, middle, and western States together, the total number of sheep in 1850 was 16,734,662, and in 1860 15,410,270, showing a decrease in the aggregate number of sheep in these States of 1,324,392. The increase has been in the Pacific and southern States. The following table shows the number of sheep to each 100 inhabitants in the diiferent sections, and in the whole United States and Territories in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. I860. New England States 56 82 Middle States 53 58 . "Western States 88 140 Southern States 54 62 Pacific States 371 231 United States and Territories 71 93 In 1850 there were 93 sheep to every 100 persons in the States and Territories, and 71 in 1860. In the middle States there were 58 sheep to each 100 persons in 1850, and 53 in 1860. In the New England States there were in 1850 82 sheep to each 100 persons, and 56 in 1860. In the western States there were to each 100 inhabitants 140 sheep in 1850, and 88 sheep in 1860. In the southern States there were to each 100 inhabitants 62 sheep in 1850, and 54 sheep in 1860. In the Pacific States there were 231 sheep to each 100 persons in 1850, and 371 sheep in 1860. AMOUNT OP WOOL PEE SHEEP. The following table will show the amount of wool from each sheep in the difierent sections, and in the whole United States and Territories, in 1850 and in 1860 : I860. 1850. ' New England States 3.62 lbs. 3.15' lbs. Middle States 3.28 " 2.74 " Western States 2.82 " 2.43 " Southern States 1.95 " 1.82 " Pacific States 1.68 " 0.18 " United States and Territories 2.68 " 2.41 " In 1850 the amount of wool in the United States and Territories was 2.41 pounds per sheep, and in 1860 2.68 pounds, showing an increase of 0.27 pounds per sheep, or a little over one-quarter of a pound per sheep. INTRODUCTION. cxxiii In the New England States the amount per sheep in 1850 was 3.15 pounds, and in 1860 3.62, an increase of 0.57 pound, or over half a pound per sheep. In the middle States the amount of wool per sheep in 1850 was 2.74 pounds, and in 1860 3.28, an increase of 0.74 pound, or nearly three-quarters of a pound per sheep. In the western States the amount of wool per sheep in 1850 was 2.43 pounds, and in 1860 2.82 pounds, an increase of 0.39 pound, or about six ounces per sheep. In the southern States the amount of wool per sheep in 1850 was 1.82 pound, and in 1860 1.95 pound, an increase of 0.13 pound, or about two ounces per sheep. In the Pacific States the amount of wool per sheep in 1850 was only 0.18 pound, or less than three ounces. In 1860 the amount had increased to 1.68 pound, showing that vast improvements have taken place in sheep husbandry in the Pacific States. This has been brought about principally by the intro- duction of sheep from the Atlantic States and from Australia. It will be observed that more wool is obtained per sheep in the New England States than in any other section; the middle States coming next, then the western, then the southern, and lastly the Pacific. The increase of wool per head has been greatest in the Pacific States, or over one pound and a half per head. The middle States show the next greatest increase, or about three-quarters of a pound per sheep. The western States come next, or about six ounces per sheep. The southern States show the smallest increase, or only two ounces per sheep. It may be well to observe that the improvement which has taken place in the New England and middle States in the weight of wool has been obtained, it is believed, to a certain extent, at the expense of quality. It is claimed by the manufacturers that there is more oil or grease in the fleeces than for- merly ; and it is a fact that they pay more for Ohio and other western wool than for that of the middle and New England States. Vermont wool is usually quoted at five cents per pound less than Ohio wool. SWINE. There were in the States and Territories 30,354,213 swine in 1850, 33,512,867 in 1860, showing an increase of over 3,000,000. The following table shows the number of swine in the New England States in 1860, as compared with 1860 : I860. 1850. Connecticut 75, 120 76, 472 Massachusetts 73, 948 81, 119 Maine 54, 783 54, 598 New Hampshire. 51, 935 63, 487 Rhode Island 17, 478 19, 509 Vermont 52, 912 66, 296 Total 326, 176 361, 481 There were in the New England States in 1850 361,481 swine, and in 1860 326,176, showing a decrease of 35,310 head. There has been a decrease in all the New England States except Maine, where there is an increase of about two hundred. The following table shows the number of swine in the middle States in 1860, as compared vdth 1850 : I860. 1850. New York 910, 178 1, 018, 252 New Jersey 236, 089 260, 370 Pennsylvania 1, 031, 266 1, 040, 366 Delaware 47, 848 56, 261 Maryland '.-. 387,756 352,911 District of Columbia 1,099 1,635 Total 2, 614, 236 2, 719, 795 cxxiv INTRODUCTION. There were 2,719,795 swine in the middle States in 1850, and 2,614,236 in 1860 ; a decrease of over 105,000 head. There is a slight increase in Maryland ; all the other States have decreased. In New York alone there is a decrease of over 100,000 head. Pennsylvania has more swine than any other middle State. The following table shows the number of swine in the western States in 1860, as compared with 1850: I860. 1850. Illinois 2, 502, 308 1, 915, 907 Indiana 3, 099, 110 2, 263, 776 Iowa 934, 820 323, 247 Kansas 138, 224 Kentucky 2, 330, 595 2, 891, 163 Missouri 2, 345, 425 1, 702, 625 Michigan 372, 386 205, 847 Minnesota 101,371 734 Ohio 2, 251, 653 1, 964, 770 Wisconsin 334, 055 159, 276 Nebraska 25, 369 Total 14, 435, 316 11, 427, 345 There were in the western States 11,427,345 swine in 1850, and in 1860 14,435,330, showing an increase of over three million. There has been an increase in every western State except Kentucky, in which State there has been a falling oiF in the number of swine of over half a million. Indiana has more swine than any other State in the west, or, in fact, of the United States, having 3,099,110, against 2,263,776 in 1850. Illinois stands next, having 2,502,308 head in 1860, against 1,915,907 in 1850; an increase of over half a million. Missouri stands next, having 2,345,425, against 1,702,625 in 1850 ; showing an increase of nearly forty per cent. Kentucky had more swine in 1850 than any other western State, and more than any other in the United States except Tennessee. She has now, however, about 15,000 less than Missouri. Iowa shows a remarkable increase in the number of swine, having 323,247 in 1850, and 934,820 in 1860 ; an increase of nearly 200 per cent. Minnesota has increased from 734 in 1850, to 101,371 in 1860; an increase of 100,000. The following table shows the number of swine in the southern States in 1860, as compared with 1850: I860. 1850. Alabama 1, 748, 321 1, 904, 540 Arkansas 1, 171, 630 836, 727 Florida 271, 742 209, 453 Georgia 2, 036, 116 2, 168, 617 Louisiana 634, 525 597, 301 Mississippi 1, 532, 768 1, 582, 734 North Carolina 1, 883, 214 1, 812, 813 South Carolina 965, 779 1, 065, 503 Tennessee 2, 347, 321 3, 104, 800 Texas 1, 371, 532 692, 022 Virginia 1, 599, 919 1, 829, 843 Total 15, 562, 867 15, 804, 353 There were in the southern States in 1850 15,804,353 swine, and in 1860 15,562,867, showing a decrease of nearly 250,000 head. INTRODUCTION. cxxv Tennessee, Georgia, North Carolina, Virginia, Mississippi, and Texas, are thelargest hog-producing States in the south. Adding Kentucky and Missouri to the southern States, it will be seen that there are 20,238,887 head of swine, while in all the other States and Territories there are only 13,273,980 The following table shows the number of swine in the Pacific States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. California 456, 396 2, 776 Oregon 81, 615 30, 235 New Mexico 10, 313 7, 314 Washington 6, 383 Utah 6, 707 914 Total 561, 414 41, 239 There were 561,414 swine in the Pacific States in 1860, against 41,239 in 1850, showing an increase of over twelve hundred per cent. California has increased from less than three thousand in 1850, to nearly a half million in 1860. The following table shows the number of swine in the different sections, and in the United States and Territories, to each hundred inhabitants, in 1850 and in 1860 : I860. 1850. New England States 10 13 Middle States 31 41 Western States 149 181 Southern States 175 215 Pacific States 101 23 States and Territories 106 131 In the New England States there were thirteen head of swine to each hundred inhabitants in 1850, and only ten in 1860. In the middle States there were,in 1850, forty-one to each hundredinhabitants, and thirty-one in 1860. In the western States there were one hundred and eighty-one to each hundred inhabitants in 1850, and one hundred and forty-nine in 1860. In the southern States there were two hundred and fifteen to each hundred inhabitants in 1850, and one hundred and seventy-five in 1860. In the Pacific States there were, in 1850, twenty-three to each hundred inhabitants, and one hundred and one in 1860. In all the sections, except the Pacific States, the increase in the number of swine has not kept pace with the increase in population. It will be observed that there are more swine in the southern States, in proportion to population, than in any other section. There are in the south eight and three-quarters pigs to each family of five persons. The western States have the next largest proportion of swine. There are nearly seven and one- half to each family of five persons. The Pacific States have the next largest proportion, or a little over five to each family. In the middle States there are only about three to ten persons, and in the New England States only one to ten persons. In the western States there are nearly five times as many swine, in proportion to population, as in the middle States, and fifteen times as many as in the New England States. In the United States there were one hundred and thirty-one swine to each hundred inhabitants in 1850, and one hundred and six in 1860. This falling off in the number of swine, in proportion to population, may be accounted for by the increased ' facilities for the transportation of grain, and its consequent relative advance in price. Pigs can be multiplied so rapidly that, as soon as it is more profitable to feed grain to swine than to sell it, CXXVl INTRODUCTION, the supply of pork will be quite equal to the demand. In the New England and middle States pork, up to the present winter, (1864~'65,) has rarely commanded a price at which marketable grain can be fed to swine with a profit. Under the best system of feeding, it requires seven bushels of Indian corn to make one hundred pounds of pork; and, as the freight from the west is much less on the hundred pounds of pork than it is on the seven bushels of com, (say 420 pounds,) and as hitherto the Atlantic cities have been the principal market, it is more profitable for the western farmers to feed their grain to pigs than it is for the farmers of the middle and New England States. In other words, the farmers of these States are subjected to a more severe competition from the west in the production of pork than in the production of grain. During the present winter grain has been so high in the west that there has been less difierence in favor of the western farmer in fattening pork, as compared with the eastern farmer, and the result has been a much higher price in the Atlantic States than ever before known. For the first time in many years it has been quite profitable to fatten pigs on marketable grain in the middle and New England States. The fact is an interesting one, as sustaining the views expressed in the former part of this article in regard to the difficulties under which the farmers of the Atlantic States labor in the production of beef, pork, wool, and other articles on which, in proportion to value, the freight is comparatively light, and, as a consequence, the difficulty of making manure and increasing the fertility of the soil. VALUE OP LIVE STOCK. Value of live stock in the United States in 1860. STATES. Alabama Arkansas California Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts . . Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri New Hampshire New Jersey New York North Carolina. Ohio VALUE. 22, 35, 11, 3, 5, 38, 72, 41, 22, 3, 61, 24, 15, 14, 12, 23, 3, 41, 53, 10, 16, 103, 31, 80, 411,711 096, 977 585, 017 311, 079 144, 706 553, 356 372, 734 501, 225 855, 539 476, 293 332, 450 868, 237 546, 940 437, 533 667, 853 737, 744 714,771 642, 841 891, 692 693, 673 924, 627 134, 693 856, 296 130,805 384, 819 STATES. Oregon Pennsylvania. . Ehode Island . . South Carolina. Tennessee Texas Vermont Virginia Wisconsin Total States. TERRITORIES. District of Columbia. Dakota Nebraska Nevada New Mexico Utah Washington Total Territories. Aggregate. VALUE. $5, 946, 255 69, 672, 726 2, 042, 044 23, 934, 465 60,211,425 42, 825, 447 16, 241, 989 47, 803, 049 17, 807, 375 1, 080, 758, 386 109, 640 39, 116 1, 128, 771 177, 638 4, 499, 746 1,516,707 1,099,911 8, 571, 529 1,089,329,915 The aggregate value of live stock in the States and Territories in 1850 was $545,180,516, and in 1860 $1,089,329,915, showing an increase of $545,149,399, or over one hundred per cent. ■INTRO D IJ C T I O N . cxxvii The following table shows the value of live stock in the New England States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Oonnecticut $11, 311, 079 $7, 467, 490 Massachusetts 12, 737, 744 9, 647, 710 Maine 15, 437, 533 9, 705, 726 New Hampshire 10, 924, 627 8, 871, 901 Rhode Island 2, 042, 044 1 , 532, 637 Vermont 16, 241 , 989 12, 643, 228 Total 68, 695, 016 49, 869, 692 In round numbers the value of live stock in the New England States was $50,000,000 in 1850, and $68,000,000 in 1860, or an increase of $18,000,000, or 36 per cent. Vermont stands first in the value of live stock, but not first in increase since 1850. Maine, which is second in the value of live stock, is first in the increase since 1850, having increased nearly $5,000,000, while Vermont has increased less than $4,000,000. Massachusetts has increased about $3,000,000, and Connecticut nearly $4,000,000, and New Hampshire $2,000,000. The following table shows the value of live stock in the middle States in 1860, as compared with 1850: I860. 1850. New York $103, 856, 296 $73, 570, 499 New Jersey 16, 134, 693 10, 679, 291 Pennsylvania 69, 672, 726 41, 500, 053 Maryland 14, 667, 853 7, 097, 634 Delaware 3, 144, 706 1, 849, 281 District of Columbia 109,640 71,643 Total 207, 585, 914 135, 698, 401 The value of live stock in the middle States in 1850 was $135,698,401, and in 1860 $207,585,914, an increase of about $72,000,000, or 52 per cent. Nearly one-half the value of live stock in the middle States is in New York, being nearly $104,000,000 in 1860, against $73,500,000 in 1850, an increase of about 40 per cent. In Pennsylvania the increase is stUl greater, or nearly 70 per cent. In Maryland, however, the value of live stock has increased more rapidly than in any other middle State, or nearly 100 per cent. The following table shows the value of live stock in the western States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Illinois ^ $72, 501, 225 $24, 209, 258 Indiana 41, 855, 539 22, 478, 555 Iowa 22, 476, 293 3, 689, 275 Kentucky 61, 868, 237 29, 661, 436 Kansas 3, 332, 450 Michigan 23, 714, 771 8, 008, 734 Minnesota 3, 642, 841 92, 859 Missouri 53, 693, 673 19, 887, 580 Ohio 80, 384, 819 44, 121, 741 Wisconsin 17, 807, 375 4, 897, 385 Nebraska 1,128,771 Total 382, 405, 994 157, 046, 823 cxxviii INTRODUCTION. In the western States in 1850 the value of live stock was $157,046,823, and in 1860 $382,405,994— an increase of $225,359,171, or 143 per cent. We have not space to allude to the value of live stock in the different States. The table speaks for itself, and is worthy of careful study. Ohio shows the greatest value of live stock in 1860, and also in 1850. Kentucky stood second in 1850, but is third in 1860. Illinois being about $11,000,000 in advance of her at the last census. Kansas, which was unreported in 1850, had to the value of $3,332,450 in 1860. The following table shows the value of live stock in the southern States in 1860, as compared with 1850 : I860. 1850. Alabama $43, 411, 711 $21, 690, 112 Arkansas 22, 096, 977 6, 647, 969 Florida 5, 553, 356 2, 880, 058 Georgia 38, 372, 734 25, 728, 416 Louisiana 24, 546, 940 11, 152, 275 Mississippi 41, 891, 692 19, 403, 662 North Carolina 31, 130, 805 17, 717, 647 South Carolina 23, 934, 465 15, 060, 015 Tennessee 50, 211, 425 29, 978, 016 Texas 42, 825, 447 10, 412, 927 Virginia 47, 803, 049 38, 656, 659 Total 381, 778, 601 194, 327, 766 The value of live stock in the southern States in 1850 was $194^27,756, and in 1860 $381,778,601— an increase of $187,450,845, or 86 per cent. The following table shows the value of live stock in the Pacific States in 1860, as compared with 1850: I860. 1850. California $S5, 585, 017 $3, 351, 058 Oregon 5, 946. 255 1, 876, 189 New Mexico 4, 999, 746 1, 494, 629 Washington 1, 099, 911 Utah 1, 516, 707 546, 968 Total 49, 147, 636 7, 268, 844 The value of live stock.in the Pacific States in 1850 was $7,268,844, and in 1860 $49,147,636— an increase of $41,878,792, or 576 per cent. It will be observed that the increase in the value of live stock since 1850 is : New England States ^ ... 36 per cent. Middle States 52 Western States 143 Southern States 86 Pacific States 576 States and Territories 100 RECAPITULATION. It may be interesting to place together in a table the amount of some of the leading products, in proportion to population, in 1860 and in 1850. Such a table will show at a glance the progress we have made since 1850. We have prepared the following table for this purpose : INTRODUCTION. CXXIX Table showing the amount of the principal agricultural products in the different sections, and in the States and Territories, in proportion to population, in 1860 as compared vrith 1850. AMOUNT or PRODUCTS TO EACH INHABITANT. SECTIONS. Wbeat. Indian corn. Barley. Bye. Oats. Buckwheat. Peas and beans. Irish pota-' toes. Sweet pota- toes. Butter. Cheese. 1860. 1850. 1860. 1850. 1860. 1850. 1860. 1850. 1860. 1850. 1860. 1850. 1860. 1850. 1860. 1850. 1860. 1850. 1860. 1850. 1860. 1850. New England States Middlo States Bush. 0.34 3.75 9.75 3.49 13.87 5.44 Bush. 0.40 5.75 7.25 2.47- 3.09' 4.33 Busli. 2.90 9.04 45.27 30.83 2.55 26.12 Bush. 3.70 9.11 44.14 30.83 2.18 26.04 Bush. 0.38 0.54 0.43 o.oa 7.88 6.46 Bush. 0.15 0.56 0.11 0.001 0.05 0.22 Bush. 0.42 1.47 0.49 . 0.24 0.10 0.66 Bush. 0.57 1.57 0.19 0.13 1.001 0.64 Bush. 3.43 8.65 6.51 2.18 4.00 5.49 Bush. 2.95 8.20 7.55 4.46 0.40 6.32 Bush. 0.30 1.40 0.41 0.05 0.07 0.56 Bush. 0.22 0.96 0.25 0.03 0.002 0.38 Bush. 0.15 0.21 0.10 1.26 0.54 0.48 Bush. 0.12 0.12 0.13 0.97 0.13 0.35 Bush. 6.77 5.28 3.55 6.72 4.15 3.57 Bush. 7.19 3.88 2.68 0.58 0.80 2.83 Bush. Bush. Lbs. 16.34 21.50 16.13 6.58 8.71 14.64 Lbs. 16.10 16.08 14.33 6.12 1.65 13.51 Lbs. 6.84 6.15 2.97 0.08 3.10 3.36 Lis. 9.94 7.94 3.92 Southern States Pacific States States ana Territories 1.32 1.66 0.13 0.47 4.11 This table is worthy of careful study. It will be seen that in proportion to population, taking the^.^,^ States and Territories together, there has been a slight increase in our principal crops since 185^ Of wheat, Indian corn, barley, rye, oats, buckwheat, and peas and beans, we raised in 1850 38.28 bu^el^.to ,^ an inhabitant, and in 1860 39.15 bushels. This shows an increase in the total amount of these ^pps - ■* of nearly one bushel to each inhabitant since 1850. • ' When it is remembered that our horses, cattle, sheep, swine, &c., have also increased, and that these animals have to be fed to a certain extent on the products named, a total increase of one bushel to an inhabitant is small indeed. "With a country of great extent, abounding with the accumulated fertility of centuries, this exhibit of the products of our agriculture is not flattering. In the New England States the total amount of the crops named was 8.11 bushels in 1850, and 7.92 bushels in 1860, showing a decrease of .18 of a bushel. In the middle States they amounted to 26.27 bushels in 1850, and 25.33 bushels in 1860, showing a decrease of nearly one bushel. In the western States the crops named amounted in 1850 to 59.62 bushels to each inhabitant, and in 1860 to 62.96, showing an increase of over three bushels to each inhabitant. In the southern States these crops amounted to 38.89 in 1850, and 38.07 in 1860, showing a decrease of nearly one bushel to each inhabitant. Irf the Pacific States these crops amounted in the aggregate to 5.47 bushels to each inhabitant in 1850, and to 29.01 in 1860, showing an increase of twenty-three and a half bushels to each person. There is, therefore, a decrease in all the sections except the western and Pacific States ; but the increase in these more than makes up for the decrease in the New England, middle, and southern States. We think these figures will show the necessity of an improved system of agriculture. If in a period of profound peace and general prosperity our products but barely kept pace with the increase in population, it is certain that the same system of cultivation will not enable us to do so in a period of war. It is probable, however, nay, almost certain, that the high prices which farmers are now obtain- ing for their products will lead to a better system of agriculture. CATTLE AND CATTLE TRADE OP THE WEST. It was not long after the first settlement of the interior of Ohio before the earlier pioneers per- ceived the absolute necessity for a market for the product of the soil. They had cast their lot in the midst of an extensive new country, where the land was eminently fertile; and the question, how could the product of that soil be advantageously disposed of, received their early and earnest consideration. The early great immigration would furnish a market for the time being, but the rapidly increasing pro- duction would soon outstrip this consumption, and to attempt to transport tlie surplus grain in its primitive bulky state was out of the question. The great distance from market would require it to be condensed to its smallest possible compass. The article of wheat might be made into flour, and by the means of flatboats or barges floated out of the tributaries of the Ohio river, thence down that stream and the Mississippi to New Orleans. This was the only practical way open, and that only, to any great cxxx INTRODUCTION. extent, for the one product — flour; and notwithstanding thn hazards and hardships to be encountered in that trade at an early day, the extreme scarcity of money, combined with the restless and daring character of the young men of that- period, it was entered into with a will, and for a time the enter- prise was generally remunerative, and oftentimes highly so. The trials and hardships of a flatboat voyage to New Orleans before the days of steamboats are but little appreciated by the present genera- tion. To float a boat down to New Orleans was easy enough, provided they got safely out of the smaller streams ; but the return-trip of nearly one thousand miles by land, the greater part of the way through an uninhabited and almost unbroken forest, was generally made on foot, and if the freshets in the smaller streams did not occur until middle or late spring, these trips were oftentimes attended with great mortality. Nevertheless, the trade flourished, and rapidly increased, until at length, some years after the close of the war of 1812, the supply so far outran the demand that the business became very precarious, oftentimes resulting in a loss to the shipper of almost the entire cargo. Thg consequence • was the price of wheat was reduced so low as no longer to be regarded as the staple product of the j5*^^^estern farmer, and indeed it finally ceased for a time to be a cash article ; and it was no uncommon ■ sigJit to see stacks of wheat rotting down in the field — twenty-five cents per bushel in store-goods or traddfflfeing the highest price obtainable by the farmer. . . .The large bodies of rich bottom-land lying on the borders of the tributary streams of the Ohio wJsi^ not adapted to wheat-culture, and on the Scioto river much of the land was owned by immigrants from the south branch of the Potomac river, Virginia, where the feeding of cattle had been carried on for many years in a manner peculiar to that locality, and which materially differed from the mode prac- ticed in Pennsylvania or further north. The cattle were not housed nor sheltered, but simply fed twice a day in open lots of eight or ten or more acres each, with unhusked corn with the ;fodder, and followed by hogs to clean up the neglected grains and ears ; which practice was adopted here, and is still the almost universal method throughout the west, having undergone but little or no material change in fifty years. It may be worthy of remark here, that the method of securing the corn after maturity by cutting off the stalks near the ground, and stacking it in the field, where it was grown, in stacks of from twelve to sixteen hills square, also originated' with the feeders of cattle of the south branch, the con- venience and utility of which mode is made manifest by its general prevalence at the present day. Although the business of fattening cattle was well understood by many of the earlier pioneers, and to find a market for corn was an anxious thought, yet they hesitated to engage in it. By many it was considered that the great distance from market would render that mode of disposing of their sur- plus corn impracticable ; the long drive to an eastern market would so reduce the cattle in flesh as to render them unfit for beef; but some thought otherwise, and among the latter was George Renick, lately deceased, an enterprising and intelligent merchant, who, owning a considerable landed estate, concluded, himself, to try the experiment. Accordingly in the winter of 1804-05, he fed a lot of cattle and sent them to Baltimore the following spring — (the first fat cattle that ever crossed the Alle- ghany mountains ;) the result was a complete success. Thus was another avenue of trade practically opened, which for half a century contributed largely to the wealth of the Scioto valley; and from this small beginning the trade increased gradually, but not rapidly, until some years after the close of the war, when the failure of wheat to command cash gave a great impetus to the raising and feeding of cattle and hogs; for, although the selling price of such stock was very low, they were the only remaining cash articles of the farmer, and the cost of production was not very carefully considered. There was no alternative, as he was obhged to have some money wherewith to procure the necessaries of life, pay taxes, &c., and the business continued to increase rapidly until about the year 1850, notwithstanding the opening of the New York and Ohio canals in the mean time, had added greatly to the resources of the Ohio farmer by giving him access to a better and more rehable market, enabling him to sell for cash, not only his wheat, but every other product of the soil, at much more remunerating prices than formerly. The completion of the great through railroads added still further to the farmer's resources, enabling him to diversify his pursuits, and assisted in bringing the corn-feeding of cattle, so far as Ohio was concerned, to its culminating point. From his personal knowledge of the business, it is the con- INTRODUCTION. /- cxxxi viction of the present Mr. Renick, that since then it has been on the decline. The whole number of cattle corn-fattened in Ohio may not have perceptibly decreased, but the home consumption, including the extensive barrelling, has greatly increased ; but the excess or the number sent to an eastern market from that region has evidently, during the last decade, fallen off, and the cattle of late years are not so heavy nor made so fat as formerly. Mr. Renick gives it as his opinion that cattle can no longer be corn-fed in Ohio for the great length of time and in the profuse manner as formerly, vi^ith profit ; indeed, in some of the largest feeding districts of tw^enty years ago the business has entirely ceased ; and he very much questions w^hether the business can be profitably carried on as a leading one with the farmer in any locality possessing other ordinary modern resources, when the population of that locality exceeds fifty inhabitants to the square mile, exclusive of populous towns, and can then only be done profitably in a limited way, as a secondary or attendant on other pursuits of the farmer, and then in a different^ manner from that now generally pursued. The construction of the great through rail- roads, which tended to diminish the feeding of cattle in Ohio, contributed largely to its wonderful increase in Illinois and other western States, afibrding them facilities for reaching an eastern market of which they had hitherto been almost deprived — the distance the cattle had to travel proving actually too great, as the pioneers at first supposed it would, from Ohio; and though the railroads also facilitated the transportation of fat cattle from Ohio, adding but little to the cost, and saving to the drover near or quite one hundred pounds of flesh, on an average, to each animal, yet, by affording quicker and at all times a more certain conveyance for other things as well, particularly the article of whiskey, and the manufacturers of that article being able to pay more for corn than the cattle-feeders could possibly afford to do, they more than counterbalanced the advantages derived therefrom to stock-raising. Hence, in localities favorably situated for the sale of corn, the business of feeding it to cattle has become a comparatively unimportant one. Before the era of railroads, to break the long drive, large numbers of stock or store-cattle were annually driven from Illinois and the west into Ohio to be fed there, and when made fat were sent to an eastern market; but that trade has now become almost obsolete. Formerly, too, the driving of stock-cattle from Ohio to Pennsylvania and the east was conducted on an extensive scale, and indeed that trade, during the State's gloomiest pecuniary period, ranked as one among her chief resources, always commanding money in hand, however low the price might be ; but that trade has also ceased, except to a comparatively limited extent from the northern part of the State into that of New York. To avoid misapprehension, let us here say, that our remarks thus far with reference to beef-cattle in Ohio apply only to those made fat. or mostly so, on corn, as doubtless the number of grass-fattened, or those that have been but sHghtly fed on corn, has somewhat increased. Indeed, the whole business of fattening cattle has undergone a great change since the era of railroads. Formerly the great bulk of the corn-fed cattle of the west, nine-tenths of which were from Ohio and Kentucky, chiefly from Ohio, sent to the eastern markets, arrived there between the middle of April and 1st of August, and the markets of New York in particular were chiefly supplied from those sources during that time, and grass-fattened cattle were sent in the fall from Ohio in limited numbers, and no cattle arrived in those markets from the west during the winter or first month of spring; but now they are sent at all seasons of the year, and but few of those are so heavily corn-fed or made so fat as formerly. In a word, there is not near so much consumed in fattening cattle in Ohio now as there was twelve or fifteen years ago ; yet there are, doubtless, more cattle partially fed now than then, but grass is more relied upon to prepare the cattle for market. Nor is there the same occasion to make them so solidly fat as formerly, for the conveyance to market by railroad is a great saving of flesh over the former method of driving. It is not to be understood that cattle are better or longer grazed than formerly, for the contrary is the fact ; but formerly, when the business of feeding cattle on the Scioto river was at its height, say from 1840 to 1850, to make an A No. 1 lot of fat cattle, the best grades were fed some ten to twenty bushels of corn in March and April when they were three years old, and other cattle at the age of four years ; they were then grazed throughout the whole summer and fall in the best manner, then fed from four to five and a half months all the corn they would eat— say full half bushel per day each before cxxxii INTRODUCTION, starting to market; cattle that had no corn the previous spring were well grazed and fed from five to six months. Novv^, cattle handled as the former would begin to go to market by the 1st of July, and all or nearly all would be in market before the 1st day of January. Quite a common way of prosecut- ing the business now is to commence feeding the cattle in January or February, when less than three years old, on corn in limited quantities, substituting more fodder or other rough feed, but increasing the quantity of corn in March or April, often to full feeding, say from twenty-five to forty bushels in the aggregate, per head, and these cattle will commence to be sent to market by the 1st of June, and by the 1st of October by far the greater portion will have gone ; comparatively few of them, perhaps, having been detained to be fed on corn for a month or two before starting them. Of course the quality of the beef of cattle so young, and handled after this fashion, can bear no comparison with that as made by the former method. The first introduction into the west of English cattle was made by Matthew Pattoji, (hence the name given to that celebrated stock,) who removed from Hardy county, Virginia, to Kentucky, about the year 1794, and brought the cattle with him. Patton had obtained the ancestors of this stock of Mr. Golf, of Maryland, in 1783, who had then recently imported them from England. John Patton, a son of Matthew, removed in 1800 from Kentucky to Chillicothe, Ohio, bringing a part of the same stock with him. Between that time and 1817, occasionally a few other animals were introduced, mostly of the same breed, but including some of an importation made by a Mr. Miller, of Maryland, between 1790 and 1795. These cattle, both Goff and Miller importations, were of very large size, and the cows generally good milkers, and when first introduced were a fine quality of beef-cattle — bone not large for the size of the animal — but on account of their great growth were longer maturing than the common slock of the country ; but in the course of time their defects grew upon them. They became larger, coarser, and longer maturing, and of course harder to fatten. This change was attributed to the rich feed, which was probably the fact. We know that poor feed will degenerate, and it was probably this latter fact that led Count Buffbn, the great European naturalist, to assert that all animals when translated from Europe to America would degenerate. The finest animal of the cow kind I have ever seen was of this breed; in the fall of 1819 this was six and one-half years old, and was estimated to weigh over 2,000 pounds, net beef His head, neck, and limbs were remarkably neat, his brisket very deep and broad, and he girted immediately behind the shoulders the extraordinary measure often feet ten inches, and his back and loin I certainly never have seen excelled, if equalled. I have been thus minute in this description, because I have seen several treatises, or rather communications on the com- parative excellence of the different breeds of cattle imported into this country, and all of them disparaging in a greater or less degree this breed of cattle. This breed proved an admirable one for crossing with the common stock of the country better, perhaps, than any following importation. In 1817 Messrs. Saunders, Zugarden, and , of Kentucky, imported from England five bulls — three short horns, and two long horns — and eight or nine cows of the two breeds. The long horns being the most sightly animals, took the fancy of the people at first, and some of those having good stock of former importations wellnigh ruined them for the shambles by introducing the long horns among them. Their flesh was very dark and tough, without any admixture of fat, as a butcher's animal should have, and withal the cows were poor milkers. The short horns proved a valuable acquisition to the existing stock of the country, though the quality of their beef was perhaps no better than the Patton or Miller stock, nor were the cows better milkers, but their early maturity, and aptitude to fatten were qualities peculiarly desirable at the time, had they been properly appreciated and improved upon by the breeders generally. But unfortunately, in Kentucky in particular, the long horns got a pretty general dissemina- tion before they were entirely discarded, and a practice of somewhat indiscriminate breeding followed, producing about as undesirable a stock for the shambles as could well be imagined. They were very large, but very unsaleable, and nick-named by the butchers of the eastern cities, " red horses." There never was enough of the short horned breed clear of admixture in the eastern markets for their sham- ble qualities to be clearly established by the butchers there, though in the west it was known to be at least not inferior to any breed then existing. INTRODUCTION. cxxxiii But it was not until about 1832 to 1836 that a general interest for the improvement of the stock of cattle began to be manifested by the farmers and cattle men at large. Hitherto it had been con- fined chiefly to a few individuals in different localities in Kentucky, Ohio, and other western States, though more general in the former. But the beautiful display at the county fairs (then recently revived) and elsewhere of the many beautiful animals of the English improved Durhams, imported by the dif- ferent associations into Kentucky aad Ohio about that period, combined with the almost fabulous prices which they would command, contributed in no small degree towards creating the general interest on the subject that followed, and which resulted within a few years thereafter in a great improvement in the quality of the stock throughout the whole west, greater, perhaps, than would have otherwise taken place within a quarter of a century. Nor were the people misled by appearances this time ; for, after thirty years' trial, this breed, when well cared for, still maintains its English reputation of possessing^ in a greater degree than any other stock, all the essential qualities, such as size, neatness of form, early maturity, aptitude to fatten, and the marbled admixture of fat with the lean in the beef requisite to make both the raising and feeding more profitable, as well as furnishing to the consumer a superior quality of beef. But the present management of these cattle, and their crosses, called " grades," is nowise cal- culated to sustain the hitherto high character of their beef among consumers. Apparently both feeders and drovers, not willing to be behindhand with the railroads, nor any other fast thing in this fast age, make haste to realize and hurry off their half-fatted stock to market at the early age of three years, thereby involving an absolute waste of " raw material ;" whereas, if those same cattle were kept one year longer, and made ripe for the shambles, there would not only be a gain of full one-third in weight but they would produce a quality of beef not excelled in any country or clime. The wonderful increase of late years both in the production and consumption of beef cattle in the United States, the one obviously keeping pace with the rapid strides of the other, has developed in part the capabilities of the vast western prairies, providentially provided beforehand to meet the wants of a, great nation increasing in population and advancing in wealth and power with a rapidity wholly unprecedented in history. The original or common cattle of the west were introduced into the coun^jry from various quarters, the earlier immigrants from Pennsylvania, Virginia, and other States bringing a greater or less number of cows with them, and the Indians furnished a part. Of course they were a heterogeneous collection; yet, in the process of time, in each considerable district of country of similar formation and resources; where there was no efibrt made at improvement, the stock assimilated or acquired characteristic quali- ties peculiar to itself, and so dissimilar from other sections as to enable the experienced cattle dealer to readily determine, by the general appearance of the stock, the region of country in which the cattle were raised. In the more hilly and timbered localities the cattle were smaller, of compact build, hardy, healthy, and easily fatted; whereas, in the more open portions of the country, where the feed was abundant, the stock became larger, looser made, coarser, more subject to disease, and harder to fatten ; but the general effort made of late years to improve the stock by the introduction of improyed breeds has rendered these local characteristics less distinguishable than formerly. The manner of raising or breeding of cattle has undergone considerable change of late years. Formerly, when the price of land was very low, and the range extensive, it was the general custom of farmers and cattle men to keep more cows than were actually necessary to supply the wants of the family ; indeed, many of them kept large herds of cows for the sole purpose of raising cattle. But that business has now, at least so far as Ohio and Kentucky are concerned, almost entirely ceased, though it is still carried on to a limited extent further west and south, more particularly in Texas, where, before the war, many 'individuals could count their herds by the thousand. Yet, even in Ohio and Kentucky, the number of cows has not decreased, but, on the contrary, doubtless has largely increased, more es- pecially in Ohio, where, in addition to the largely increased home consumption, the extensive cheese manufactories and large export of butter of late years have rendered a largely increased number of cows necessary. The calves of these cows are, to a considerable extent, bought up by dealers in the fall. cxxxiv INTRODUCTION. who, perhaps, keep them a year, and then they pass into other hands, who, in turn, keep them another year, when the stock in large numbers passes into the hands of the feeders. ^This cannot be said to be the universal custom, but its practice is sufficiently prevalent to be designated as general. A very Hmited proportion of this stock is housed or sheltered during the winter, at least south of. forty- one degrees of north latitude, unless it be the calves the first winter to some extent ; nor is it the custom to house any cattle even while preparing for market. They are generally fed in open lots, though positions sheltered from wind and storms by timber or other natural obstructions are taken advantage of In communicating his experience with Texas cattle, Mr. Renick writes as follows : " In the winter of 1853-54 I had purchased for use about 1,200 head of cattle in the northern part of Texas, which section of country had been to a considerable extent settled by immigrants from Illinois and Missouri, and who had brought their stock with them ; and this stock had not yet been suffi- ciently intermixed with the Spanish or Opelousas cattle further south to materially deteriorate their original qualities ; consequently they were a much better and larger stock than I expected to see, though they had in some measure acquired the wild nature of the more southern stock. These cattle were brought to Illinois in the spring and summer of 1854 — the first, I believe, that ever came from Texas, at least in large numbers. This enterprise created quite an excitement in the northern part of Texas, and all my correspondents there manifested a strong desire to have this new trade continued and ex- tended, freely offering their best efforts to encourage it, as they believed it would result advantageously to all concerned, and promising, if successful, to send north for a better breed of cattle, as they said,' and with truth, that they could raise cattle and deliver them in Illinois, with satisfactory profits to. themselves, for less, by one-half, than they could be raised in that State. In anticipation of this trade being continued the following season, quite a large number of cattle were brought up from points further south, and, as was expected, the trade opened lively ; but an unforeseen difficulty exploded the whole business within the next two years. It was found that the southern or Spanish cattle were subject to an epidemic or contagious disease somewhat resembling the yellow fever in the human race, and so contagious did it prove that all along the track those cattle were driven the farmers lost large numbers of their cattle from that disease, many losing almost their entire stock within a few days. So serious was the loss occasioned by each drove of Texas cattle passing through, that the inhabitants of southwestern Missouri held conventions in divers places, and resolved that no more Texas cattle should pass through the country, and, by order of these conventions, armed bands or patrols were appointed, whose duty it was to turn back all Texas droves that might attempt to pass, which they did effectually. Thus ended what at one time seemed a promising trade. From the short trial, however, it became evident that, from the inferiority of the Texas stock as beef cattle, the trade would not have resulted as satisfactorily as was anticipated ; the cattle were very light weighers for their size of frame, with but little room for improvement, and so wild as to be almost unmanageable. For oxen for the Santa Fe trade, or long drives over flinty roads, their hardness of hoof, their agility and endurance render them unrivalled ; and, though they never lose entirely their wild nature, yet, when judiciously trained, they become quite tractable." THE PORK TRADE. The first general violations of the levitical law prohibiting the use of swine flesh must have occurred in comparatively modern times, inasmuch as that article has only recently become sufficiently well esteemed to be introduced largely into commerce. Since, however, it has been discovered to be one of the most easily produced, and about the most easily preserved of all meats, but few articles of food have come into more general use among civilized nations. The raising of the hog has proved to be so well adapted to the varied systems or phases of agri- culture in the United States, that in nearly all parts of the country it is carried on, and the animal made to serve as a popular and cheap article of food. The preparation of the meat, however, for com- merce on a large scale, is confined mainly to those districts where Indian corn is most profitably raised and where the winters admit of the process of cure with least expense and greatest certainty. This trade can only flourish where the extremes of heat or cold do not prevail, and is comprised principally INTRODUCTION. cxxxv within the region of country between the 35th and 45th degrees of latitude, and within the Mississippi valley. Farmers within this region have found the hog to be the best animal into which to condense for market a portion of the products of their farms ; the quickest to come to maturity, besides requiring the least skill and labor to handle, hence best adapted particularly to the use of the pioneer, and is that most universally relied upon for domestic consumption and profit. In quest of articles of cheap food, Europeans, gradually at first, more rapidly of late, have formed an appreciation of provisions of American cure. With increasing demand, necessarily came enlarged compe- tition, both amongst producers and packers, resulting in marked improvements in breeds of hogs, in their preparation for market, and in the reduction of the business of packing to a nearly perfect system, as well as to fixed scientific principles. Within twenty years, especially within the last decade, the whole packing trade has undergone improvements as marked as has been its growth. The relations of sup- ply and demand, though very irregular in a country so large and of such wonderful resources, have come to be more nearly comprehended and adjusted, so that much less risk is now incurred by the packer than in former years. Scarcely a particle of the animal is now wasted in the process of transformation into articles of food or commercial use, and the collateral trade in bristles, lard-oil, stearine, grease, skins, &c., has grown to be scarcely less important than the original one in food was twenty years ago. The number of hogs which are used in. the regular commercial packing business of the country can only, under the present system of statistics, be approximated. For the western States, through the efforts of private enterprise inaugurated in Cincinnati, it has become a matter of quite close calcu- lation; but for the eastern States there are no reliable data on which to base a close computation. Of marketable hogs, such as would average 200 pounds net, it may be fair to estimate that the number packed in the entire country in 1859— '60, and entering into the commerce of the country, was 3,000,000 head, at an aggregate prime cost of $35,000,000. The cost of packing, transportation, &o., would add to this a value of near $15,000,000, making a total of about $50,000,000 capital employed. So many circumstances transpire to cause a variation in one season as compared with another, in the prime cost of the hog and in the expense of packing, that fair averages are difficult to arrive at, and those who engage in the business find that the most extensive experience furfiishes but few data for reliable precedents. In great part the business has to be prosecuted each season in the lights of intui- tion rather than of positive information as to what may be the best policy to pursue. These intuitions, however, have given those engaged in the trade as much stability of position, perhaps, as merchants engaged in any other line of commerce, and causes the very large capital invested in the business to fluctuate now comparatively little. The greatly increased use of lard for manufacturing oil, has made for it a relatively higher price than for other parts of the hog, in which the discovery of petroleum and its rapid adoption as a luminating and lubricating material seems to have produced no essential change. This fact can only be accounted for by the well-sustained demand for candles made from stearine, enabling manufacturers to keep lard- oil in constant competition with all similar articles, and to find their profit in the stearine. The future of the trade promises a growth rapid as the past. An increasing manufacturing population and con- stant large augmentation of laboring force from foreign emigration, the yearly increasing acceptability of American packed provisions as articles of cheap food in foreign countries, all unite in assuring a consumption that will grow in equal pace with the production, and maintain for the pork trade its prominent position among the great commercial interests of the country. THE GRAIN TRADE OF THE UNITED STATES. The grain trade of the United States, viewed in all its features, is one of the chief marvels of modern commercial history. To trace its rise and progress would be almost to complete a record of the development of this entire continent, for it has been the leading agency in the opening up of seven- eighths of our settled territory. First, in the march of civilization, came the pioneer husbandman, and following close on his footsteps was the merchant ; and after him were created in rapid succession our ocean and lake fleets, our canals, our wonderful network of railroads, and, in fact, our whole commercial system. cxxxvi INTRODUCTION. The grain merchant has been in all countries, but more particularly in this, the pioneer of com- merce, whether we refer to the ocean or the inland trade, and not till he was established could other commercial adventurers find a foothold. The commercial history of the United States is based mainly on breadstuffs — staples always marketable at some quotation wherever the human family dwells. The exportation of American products to foreign countries continues to form one of the chief characteristics of our national commerce. The development of our . agricultural resources, and the increasing demands of Europe, particularly England, for foreign breadstuffs, seem to have continued at pretty regular pace. As the production of the United States increased, new and more extensive markets were thrown open — illustrating a grand design of Providence in thus developing a New World to feed the rapidly increasing populations of the Old, and supply homes for their redundant numbers. For upwards of a quarter of a century the extension of the manufacturing interests of Great Britain has been gradually but surely rendering that country more and more dependent upon other nations for the breadstuffs with which to feed her people ; and from a grain-exporting country, as she was only half a century since, she now finds herself in a position in which she has to import annually from nine to fif- teen millions of quarters of grain. Had that country twenty -five years ago been as dependent as she is now upon other nations, with the grain resources of that period, there would have been much suffer- ing among the poorer classes everywhere ; while on the other hand, without this European demand for the grain produced in the United States, the same inducements for opening up the fertile lands of the western States would not have existed. Capitalists would not have been encouraged to construct our immense canals, and lines of railroads, nor to have built our fleets of grain-carrying vessels to traverse the lakes and seas. The steady and increasing demand for American breadstuffs in Europe, however, greatly stimulated the production — made the unbroken and wild, yet fertile wilderness and prairie attractive to the agriculturists of all countries, and created a commerce for which history has few paral- lels. At the same time it has enriched our country beyond all calculation, enabled us to pay our European debts, given us an enterprising population, drawn from the industrious classes of every nationality, state, or kingdom in the Old World, and has endowed millions of human beings with wealth and the rights and privileges of free institutions. Commencing at an early period with the scant products of the Atlantic States, the grain trade was gradually pushed up the Hudson river as far as navigation would permit ; and where that ceased, the Erie canal commenced and carried it to the great lakes. It was on the completion of this great achievement that the real history of the grain trade of the United States began. Then it was that our " inland seas " became the highway of a commerce which has already attained a magnitude surpassing that of many of the oldest European nations. Then it was that the vast territory west of the lakes, hitherto the home of the "red man," and range for the buffalo, became the attractive field for the enterprising pioneers of industry and civilization, who laid the foundations of what are now seven large and flourishing States of the Union, peopled by a population vigorous and hardy, and well calculated to succeed either in the arts of peace or war. At the same time, the grain trade was steadily progressing up the Mississippi river into the heart of the west, and on whose banks were built large and flourishing cities, the great depots for nearly a quarter of a century for the products of the rich valley of that river. The grain trade has progressed, year after year, from small beginnings, till now it has become one of the leading interests of the country, and among the most important in its influence on the world, as on it depends much of the peace, happiness, and prosperity, not only of the people of the United States, but also of many of the kingdoms of Europe. THE EXPORT GRAIN TRADE. To demonstrate the magnitude of this trade, the following tables are appended, showing the total exports of grain and flour from the United States to foreign countries during the years 1862 and 1863 : INTRODUCTION. cxxxvu Table A. Exports of grain and Jlour from the United States to foreign countries for the year ending June 30, 1862. WHITHER EXPORTED. Asiatic Russia Russian Possessions in North America. Sweden and Norway Swedish West Indies Danish West Indies Hamburg Bremen Other German Ports Holland Dutch West Indies Dutch Guiana Dutch East Indies Belgium EngUmd ■ Scotland Ireland Gibraltar Malta INDIAN CORN. Bushels. Dollars. Canada Other British N. American Possessions. . British West Indies British Honduras British Guiana British Possessions la South America . . British Possessions in Africa British Australia British East Indies France on tiie Atlantic France on the Mediterranean French North American Possessions French West Indies 3,218 4,2U 33, 106 10, 662 22, 970 12, 910 6,758 62, 986 8, 290, 142 258, 861 5, 924, 793 3, 218, 438 113, 077 176, 123 INDIAN MEAL. Barrels. DoUars. 2,246 3,164 25, 450 8,247 11,937 9,591 4,393 35, 300 4, 777, 926 161, 823 3, 643, 753 1, 010, 243 65, 358 128, 020 36, 005 French Guiana French Possessions in Africa . Spain on the Atlantic Canary Islands Philippine Islands Cuba... _ Porto Rico Portugal Madeira Cape de Verde Islands Azores Sardinia Tuscany Turkey in Asia Other Forts in Africa . Hayti San Domingo Mexico Central Republic New Granada Venezuela Brazil Cisplatine Republic ■ . . Argentine Republic . . . 25 268, 476 9,260 226 24,168 11,132 1,600 199, 061 1,707 12 100 Chili ; Pom - Sandwich Islands Other Islands in the Pacific. Japan China Whale Fisheries Total. 5,200 400 346 18,364 300 240 156, 685 33, 336 26, Oil 1,190 22,393 4 10 3,047 310 1,281 206 187 33 146, 882 6,700 160 16, 301 4,787 1,294 134, 205 1,286 10, 904, 898 3,674 280 236 14, 017 251 174 124, 006 19, 497 3,964 75, 198 106, 706 18 10, 607 5 20 190 48 1,302 6,346 19, 166 15 190 3,604 72, 116 20 40 9,640 1, 050 3,972 630 i).'j8 Barrels. Dollars. 234 1,032 50 1,284 231 126 10, 974 226, 305 326, 074 54 31, 989 16 70 703 155 20, 398 61, 183 10, 3§7, 383 101 407 70 10 290, 233,5,70 52 760 240 7,637 660 Bushels. 770 4,202 5,100 212 5,146 530 4 960 27, 877 2,449 891 171 650 134 4 373 1,297 841 30 20 2,548 303 42, 651 3,061 61, 119 1, 036, 735 16, 808, 248 1, 045, 283 4, 991, 974 6, 039 4, 538, 472 13, 748 15, 823 Dollars. 2,191 349 43, 177 4,362 78, 481 1,307,172 ID, 203, 403 1, 274, 037 0, 082, 349 8, 260 3,801,515 16, 582 22, 209 1,010 444, 048 7, 655, 367 138, 198 3,363 70 W, 778, 344 14, 463 873. 2,.4g5. 960 833 5,134 327, 07Q 82; 924 457, 666 9, 546, 870 209, 081 WHEAT FLOUR. Barrels. 300 1,224 504 3,912 39, 689 4,614 24, 150 1,703 1,03T; TOO 8,443 4S,6, 419 24, 437 20, 543 7,908 5,702 68, 303 , 966, 151 175, 383 97, 912 29,341 120 118, 043 605, 826 284, 956' 19, 748 00, 699 120 27,441 87, 173 3,198 512, 838 13, 072 15, 347 26, 37Si 659 625 23, 73i 5,144 12, 226 9, 817, 1,870 1,220 4,4A Dollars. 2,325 3,842 2,430 21, 986 228, 544 23, 909 132, 816 129, 784 122, 002 31, 206 36, 512 360, 079 11, 033, 152 987, 159 531, 817 162, 668 719 336, 756 3, 199, 208 1, 601, 185 118, 389 351, 341 703 163.388 13Si657 21,297 %. 826, 130 7.7, 291 8?, 659 17^,955 4i.5(13 3,970 153. 4,282 24, 769 73, 14|0 56,638 5p4 11, 522J 6i35S, 2; 732 RYE, OATS &c. 54, 488 13, 709 2.61^ 81!- 32, 295 2 30, 504 1)3) 998r 3,8Sa 81 89,777 37,289,572 42, 573,2^,5. li,.750) 236i 12,150 80,474 9,901 46,885 5,179 14,081 48, 813, S.P,.?9R; §,546; Wl 160, 4.5Pi 50 S,8U 1,097 308 17, 312 IDO 4,, 882, 033' 8,075 1,317 75, 951 483, 455 60, 973 282,640 30,09?, ^3,7,9?, 3j4i??,15i, 4g,.910, S13|674| 9j,9ia 451 19, 999 6,832 1>5T;4, 123,709 2V5S??^ 300 105 9,430 863 11,359 144, 356 174, 955 7,500 368, 901 6,596 79 497 604, 845 173, 380 40, 378 4,395 56, 405 96. 804 64,613 1,541 11,394 3,256 238, 803 5, 195 22,101 9,897 362 11, 023 6,788 104, 228 5,.6)^5 4,726 3,223 \m. 3f,8.2G,- U, Vv. 5,218* 3i994( S6,.53a 14, 948 85, 938 4, 03fi 3,785 -, vi64. 625 18 cxxxvm INTRODUCTION. Table B. Exports of grain and Jlour from the United States to foreign countries for the year ending June 30, 1863. WHITHER EXPORTED. INDIAN CORN. INDIAN MEAL. BYE MEAL. WHEAT. WHEAT FLOUK. KYE, OATS, to. Bushels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Bushels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Dollars. 3,347 3,317 4,339 3,50 445 45,995 44 4,468 34,284 17, 065 7,525 5,004 12,828 1, 591, 778 133, 330 69,388 34,597 800 233,160 732, 384 309, 359 19, 614 72, 014 44, 569 15, 386 6,090 15, 880 5,538 10,333 38,334 950 1,496 21, 792 2,380 2,405 315,868 370 29, 135 207, 271 120, 372 53,219 39, 692 88, 9,36 9, 829, 583 789, 235 456, 091 224,424 5,600 1, 103, 171 4,420,748 2, 073, 197 144, 818 463, 184 325, 994 84,714 49, 766 110, 225 19, 637 60, 556 273, 400 7,067 12,480 2,809 3,200 272 5,372 25,173 20,556 2,440 190 5,159 27,241 18, 669 18, 609 175 25, 330 8 635 109, 631 40 150 843 332 105 235 1,755 3,547 1,338 385 1,303 7,504 7,377 6,993 31,486 110, 348 8,811 40,431 161, 186 65,584 173, 449 Holland 25 4,537 75 78 17, 984 253 84,551 30, 063 9,120 30, 777 6,646 4,074 733 Dutch East Indies 70 2,588 5,068,987 333,683 5, 381, 038 1,307 3,846,404 238, 154 3,882,801 22 1,762 97 7,140 632, 986 20, 509, 071 1, 473, 784 5,342,884 906, 164 27,654,801 1, 897, 701 7, 200, 305 130,465 England 45 189 198, 530 14,451 Ireland.. 568 2,012 41,964 22 Malta 4,211,897 171, 984 180,480. 3,185 31, 741 1,000 721 1,623,825 131, 552 161, 375 3,681 29,333 900 703 9,474 74, 478 103, 590 746 8,196 204 365 8 25, 521 286,238 408, 048 3,230 31, 983 943 1,615 37 6, 512, 801 70,894 8,441 6, 717, 093 110, 333 13, 521 119,780 Other British N. American Poss'ns. . . British West Indies 4,320 229 18, 630 907 143,370 95,856 1,340 9,898 5,483 147, 323 11, 779 181,281 55 134,555 British East Indies 25 85 673 France on the Atlantic 73 73 365, 636 38,043 541, 693 55,463 4,577 177 22,662 147 19, 686 65 1,910 251 8,072 375 French West Indies 48 228 2,186 3,657 6,904 270 75 360 Spain on the Mediterranean . 35 1,907 4,190 17, 033 15, 470 50,115 5,835 867 175 11,640 21,607 127,989 108, 976 347, 173 41, 405 6,506 1,135 117 2,523 4,507 300 563, 135 19,958 2,498 7,978 2,119 842, 151 29, 937 130 Cuba 170, 122 1,140 31, 902 525 141, 440 1,173 26,348 389 3,769 18,393 14,270 79,333 96, 860 Porto Rico 205 1,015 10, 935 Portugal 4,153 Madeira 57 1 5 Azores Sardinia 3,708 1,300 6,739 315 27, 133 122, 045 14, 067 99, 856 4,406 17, 816 53, 131 408,820 8,425 43,201 2,682 204, 759 920,854 99, 879 774,330 27, 912 139, 199 383, 650 3, 295, 673 Two Sicilies 250 Turkey in Asia Other Ports in Africa 240 1,236 725 268,653 109 58 133, 140 7,655 330 1,129 616 263, 849 98 63 120, 960 6,248 85 97 268 2,477 6 180 618 94 369 470 1,190 8,562 26 745 2, .321 361 6,315 12, 361 1,283 ■3, 440 Hayti 15 10 73 52 3,641 2,500 2,792 350, 619 547 Central Republic New Granada 2 500 15 6 2,655 90 - . 8,494 6,155 43,344 69,536 Cisplatine Republic 22,502 20,070 260 Argentine Republic 6 28 7,457 2,577 600 2,793 5,287 1,222 53, 393 170 53, 171 19, 450 4,400 13, 390 29,021 7,367 335, 856 1,500 Chili 3,038 31, 110 690 2,594 5,358 35, 468 703 2,724 285 1 5 4,210 746 Other Islands in the Pacific Japan China ...: 350 1, 429 228, 714 233, 035 16, 557 Total 16,119,476 10,592,704 257, 948 1,013,272 8,684 38, 067 36, IGO, 414 46, 754, 195 4, 390, 055 28,366,069 1, 832, 757 INTRODUCTION. CJXXIX .Reducing the flour and meal to bushels, the total exports of grain during the past two years, as given in detail in the foregoing tables, compare as follows: Years. Bus-hels. 1862 76, 309, 425 1863 77, 396, 082 Value. $83, 692, 812 88, 597, 064 Of this amount there were shipped to Great Britain and Ireland alone, for the year ending June 30, 1862, 34,102,735 bushels, and in 1863 47,082,026 bushels. The total value of the grain exported to Great Britain in 1862 was $47,916,266, and in 1863 $56,059,360. When it is taken into consid- eration that in 1825 the total value of the grain and flour exported from the United States to all foreign countries amounted to only $5,274,241, some idea may be formed of the rapid growth and development of this trade. The progress of the early export grain trade of the country is demonstrated by the following table, showing the exports of grain and flour from the United States to foreign countries each year from 1790 to 1817 : Table C. Exports of flour and grain from tJie United States to foreign countries from 1790 to 1817. [Compiled from United States documents.] Year ending — Sept. 30, 1790. J 791. 1792. 1793. 1794. 1795. 1796., 1797., 1798., 1799., 1800., 1801.. 1802.. 1803.. 1804.. 1805.. 1806.. 1807.. / 1808.. 1809.. 1810.. 1811.. 1812.. 1813.. 1814.. 1815.. 1816.. 1817.. Wheat. Bushels. 1, 124, 458 1,018,339 853,790 1,450,575 696,797 141,273 31,226 15, 655 15, 021 10, 056 26,853 239,929 280,281 686, 415 127, 024 18, 041 87,784 1, 173, 114 87, 330 393, 899 1,752 216, 833 53,832 288,535 Wheat flour. 17,634 52, 321 96, 407 Barrels, 724, 623 619,681 824, 464 1,074,639 828,405 687, 369 725, 194 515,633 567,558 519,625 653, 052 1,102,444 1, 156, 248 1,311,853 810, 008 775,513 782, 724 1, 249, 81? 263,813 846,247 798,431 1, 445, 012 1,443,492 1,260,943 193,274 ■62,739 729, 053 1, 479, 198 Indian corn. Bushels. 2,102,137 1,713,241 1,964,973 1,233,768 1,472,700 1,935,345 1,173,552 804, 922 1,218,231 1,200,492 1,694,327 1,768,162 1,633,283 2, 097, 608 1,944,873 861, 501 1,064,263 612,421 249,532 522, 074 352, 924 2,790,850 2,039,999 1,486,970 61,284 130,516 1,077,614 387, 454 Indian com meal. Barrels. 70, 339 52, 681 37, 943 48,834 102, 529 Busliels, 540,286 254,799 211,694 231,226 338,108 919, 355 266, 816 Barrels. 133, 606 111,327 116, 131 108, 342 136,460 30, 818 57,260 86,744 147, 423 '90,810 58,521 26,438 72, 364 89, 119 106,763 Eye. Busliels. 21,765 36, 737 12.727 1,305 696 703 4,319 1,331 2,721 1,595 8,227 31, 110 2,492 50,753 11,515 1,474 614 6,650 530 1,185 1,054,252 14, 818 82,705 140, 136 Eye flour. 851 3,404 1,702 Barrels. 24,062 14, 126 12,695 4,034 4.882 Busliels, 152, 784 36, 570 48,444 49,269 79, 677 392,276 33,292 Barrels. 28, 273 21,779 23, 455 18, 090 29, 067 6,167 1,306 5,078 29, 375 69, 839 65,680 2,716 6,016 8,373 78, 067 Oats. Bushels. 98, 842 116,634 119,733 78,524 55, 003 64,335 59,797 38,221 46,475 57,359 57, 306 100, 544 70,778 84, 497 73,726 55, 400 69,993 65,277 23, 698 20, 361 448 211,894 48,469 14, 105 6,046 29,899 45, 889 72, 854 Barley. Busliels. 35 30 26 345 479 4,066 522 432 8,796 485 2,745 5,318 7,185 156 4,893 173 200 6,942 29, 716 49,707 Buckwheat meal. Barrels. 422 265 J 46 361 2,300 2,237 6,858 4,093 Bushels. 1,076 286 84 754 93 1,907 3,260 Barrels, 74 2 90 25 60 73' 150 180 20 From 1790 to 1817, the j)eriod embraced in the foregoing table, the grain exported from the United States was chiefly the product of the Atlantic States. Vermont exported flour and grain of all kinds. New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, cxl INTRODUCTION, South Carolina, and Georgia, exported flour, wheat, and Indian corn — the southern States chiefly the latter. In fact, during that period the chief commerce of the Atlantic States con.sisted in the exporta- tion of grain to Spain, Portugal, and the West India islands; for in those days Grreat Britain exported more than she imported, as may be inferred from the fact that in 1804 the value of the grain exports to Great Britain amounted to only $59,120 — the nucleus of a trade that in 1863 amounted to upwards of fifty-six millions of dollars. Before the Revolution the grain trade of the colonists constituted their chief commerce. A con- siderable quantity of grain was exported to the West Indies, but the principal markets were Spain and Portugal. The exports of wheat, flour, «S;c., from Pennsylvania for the years 1729, 1730, and 1731, were as follows: Years. Wheat, bushels. Flour, barrels. Bread, casks. Value of breadstuflfs and flax-seed exported. 1729 74,800 38,643 53,320 35,438 38,570 56, 639 9,730 9,622 12, 436 £62,473 57, 500 1730 1731 68,582 In 1739 South Carolina exported 20,165 bushels of Indian corn and peas. In 1742 the price of wheat in New York was 3*. 6d. per bushel. The following table shows the amount and value of the flour and grain exported from the United States to foreign countries from 1849 to 1863 : Table D. Amount and value of grain and flour exported from the United States to foreign countries, foom 1849 to 1863. (Compiled from official documents of the United States ) YEAR ENDING— WHEAT. WHEAT FLOUR. INDIAN COKN. CORN MEAL. RYE MEAL. RYE, OATS, S, SMALL GRAIN. Bushels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Bushels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Dollars. June 30, 1849 1, 527, 534 1,756,848 2,108,013 11,280,582 13,257,309 7,966,369 405, 169 1, 169, 625 64,830 218, 248 139, 793 1850 608, 661 643, 745 1,385,448 7,098,570 6,595,092 3, 892, 193 259, 442 760, 611 69, 903 216, 076 121, 191 1851 1, 026, 725 1,025,732 2,202,335 10, 524, 331 3, 426, 811 1, 762, 549 203,622 622,866 44, 152 145,802 120,670 1852 .2,694,540 2, 555, 209 2,799,339 11, 869, 143 2, 627, 075 1,540,225 181, 105 574,380 18,"524 64, 476 334,471 1853 3, 890, 141 4, 354, 403 2, 92p, 918 14, 783, 394 2,274,909 1, 374, 077 212, 118 709, 974 8,910 34, 186 165, 824 1854 8, 036, 665 12, 420, 172 4,022,386 27, 701, 444 7,768,816 6, 074, 277 257, 403 1,002,976 23,624 112, 703 576, 195 1855 798, 884 1, 329, 246 1, 204, 540 10, 896, 908 7,807,585 6, 961, 571 267, 208 1, 237, 122 35,364 236, 248 238,976 1856 8, 154, 877 15, 115, 661 3, 510, 626 29, 275, 148 10,292,280 7, 622, 565 293,607- 1, 175, 688 38, 105 214,563 2, 718, 620 1857 14, 570, 331 22,240,857 3, 712, 053 25, 882, 316 7, 505, 318 5, 184, 656 267, 504 957, 791 27,023 115, 828 680, 108 1858 8, 926. 196 9, 061, 504 3, 512, 169 19, 328, 884 4, 766, 145 3, 259, 039 237, 637 877, 692 14,283 56, 235 642, 764 1859 3, 002, 016 2, 849, 192 2, 431, 824 14, 433, 591 1, 719, 998 1, 323, 103 258, 885 944,269 14, 432 60, 786 1, 181, 170 1860 4, 155, 153 4, 076, 704 2, 611, 596 15,448,507 3, 314, 155 2, 399, 808 2.33, 709 912,075 11,432 48, 172 1, 058, 304 1861 31,238,057 38,313,624 4, 323, 756 24, 645, 849 10, 678, 244 6, 890, 865 203,313 692,003 14, 143 55, 761 1, 124, 556 1862 37,289,572 42,-573,295 4, 882, 033 27, 534, 677 10,904,898 10, 387, 383 253,570 778, 344 14, 463 54, 488 2, 364, 625 1863 36,160,414 46, 754, 195 4,390,055 28,366,069 16,119,476 10,592,704 257, 948 1,013,272 8,684 38,067 1,832,757 INTRODUCTION. cxli The following is an exhibit of the aggrega4;e value of the domestic export^ of the United States from 1821 to 1863, with the value of the exports of breadstuifs during the same period, and the com- parative percentage each year of the latter to the former : Comparison of exports, of breadstvffs to total domestic exports. Years. 1821.. 1822.. 1823.. 1824. 1825. 1826. 1827. 1828. 1829. 1830. 1831. 1832. 1833. 1834. 4835. 1836*. 1837. 1838. 1839. 1840. 1841. 1842. S "a K S C4H OS' O a> $5,092,636 6,187,942 6,081,926 6,713,595 5,344,752 5, 419, 191 5,667,948 5, 414, 665 7, 149, 355 7,171,767 11,908,910 7, 142, 472 7,009,556 5,677,341 6,111,164 4,799,141 4,416,643 4,944,826 8,436,246 13,535,926 10,254,377 9, 878, 176 o • ° s o H 143,671,894 49,874,079 47,155,408 50,649,500 66,944,745 53,055,710 58,921,691 50, 669, 669 55, 700, 193 59, 462, 029 61,277,057 63, 137, 470 70,317,698 81, 024, 162 101,189,082 106,916,680 95,564,414 96, 033, 821 103, 533, 891 113,895,634 106,382,722 92,969,699 ri rr, ta 6 2 -.3 « 1 a S o 2 11.7 12.4 12.9 13.3 8. 10.2 9.6 10.7 12.8 11.9 19.4 9.7 10. 7. 6. 4.5 4.6 5.14 8.1 11.9 9.6 10.6 Years. 1843 1844 1845 1846 1847 1848 1849 1850 1851 1852 1853 1854 1855 1856 1857 1858 1859 1860 1861 1862 1863 12 J ^ B $5,249,600 8, 931, 396 7,445,820 16,625,407 53,262,437 22,678,602 22,895,783 13, 066, 509 14,556,236 17,256,803 21,875,878 48,383,107 21, 557, 854 56,619,986 55, 624, 8.32 33,698,490 24,893,413 27,590,298 71,722,658 .^83,692,812 88,597,064 $77,793,783 99,715,179 99,299,776 102,141,893 150,^637, 464 132, 904, 121 132,666,955 136,946,912 196,689,718 192,368,984 213,417,697 253,390,870 246,708,553 310,586,330 338,985,065 293,758,279 335, 894, 385 373,189,274 228,699,486 212,920,639 S.2 O S s § a ■ .CO V 6.7 9. 7.4 16.3 35.4 17.1 17.2 19.5 7.5 10.3 19.1 8.7 8.7 18.2 16.4 11.5 7.4 7.4 31.4 39.3 The repeal of the corn laws of Great Britain in 1846, greatly encouraged the importation of grain into that country, and since that date the export grain trade of the United States has been steadily on the increase, never falling below thirteen millions of dollars in any one year, and rising as high as eighty-eight millions. The following table shows the ratio of increase in the value of the grain exports each ten years during the past forty years : Aggregate value of grain Percentage ofincrcaBe exports each ten years, each ten years, Trom 1823 to 1833 67,842,211 From 1833 to 1843 73,303,440 8,0 From 1843 to 1853 198,594,871 170.9 From 1S53 to 1863 512, 380, 514 158.0 The following tables show the exports of flour and grain from New York, Boston, Philadelphia Baltimore, and Portland, to foreign countries for a series of years: Table DD. Exports of four and grain Jrom Neto York to foreign countries, (Compiled from official documents.) RYE, OATS, WHEAT. WHEAT FLOUR. INDIAN CORN. COKN MEAL, RYE MEAL. AND SMALL GRAIN. Year ending— Bushels, Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Bushels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Dollars. June 30, 1856 5, 0.57, 569 9,782,028 1, 649, 471 13, 602, 041 4, 012, 350 3, 462, 512 69, 809 306, 179 13, 105 76, 734 S, 022, 352 1857 9,588,506 15, 160, 511 ■ 1,735,981 12, 090, 512 3,611,330 2,506,097 75, 434 271, 980 9,266 39, 051 401, 693 1858 4, 960, 152 5, 451, 491 1, 314, 869 7, 017, 790 1,829,333 1,-331,570 62, 532 2.34, 945 5,696 31,969 109,788 1859 1, 390, 828 1 886, 113 965, 628 5, 304, 329 527, 591 433, 894 78, 477 309, 055 5, 945 24,706 369, 983 1860 1, 880, 908 2, 336, 190 1, 187, 200 6, 639, 906 580, 019 1, 182, 381 86, 073 346,430 5,010 21, 185 484, 587 1861 81,320,775 27,308,236 2, 665, 497 15,037,256 6,874,372 4,773,947 94, 314 317, 705 8,830 34, 676 590, 591 cxlii INTRODUCTION. Table DD. Exports of flour and, grain from Boston to foreign countries, (Compiled from official documents.) . RYE, OATS, WHEAT. ■WHEAT FLOUR. INDIAN COKN. CORN MEAL. KTE MEAL. AND SMALL Year ending— BRAIN. Bushels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Bushels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Dollars. Juoe30,1856 17, 994 35, 986 175, 503 1,555,937 33, 215 28,561 37,515 168,856 2,838 17,637 24,049 1857 3,652 6,179 204, 807 1,484,973 30,914 25,440 27,334 104,995 1,550 7,183 22,046 1858 2,336 3,491 154, 901 955, 257 34,760 30, 112 21,853 86,900 2,371 10,452 9,869 1859 150, 531 174,450 890,510 1,093,130 7,552 7,015 7,350 6,940 15, olO 11, 144 64, 450 1,505 1,285 7,360 30,910 29,050 1860 2,760 4,730 47, 660 5,780 1861 16,970 23,780 268,518 1,575,252 23,054 18,041 16,920 64,324 1,706 7,670 51, 940 Table DDD. Exports of flour and grain from PhiladelpMa to foreign countries. (Compiled from official documents.) RYE, OATS, WHEAT. WHEAT FLOUR. INDIAN CORN. CORN MEAL. RYE MEAL. AND SMALL Year endhig— GRAIN. Bushels. Dollars. Bushels. Dollars. Bushels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Dollars. Jane 30, 1856 359,473 670,554 314,846 2,496,968 664,898 454,172 92, 507 333, 419 13,695 72,563 270,260 1857 597, 942 1174, 693 296, 674 2,012,151 912,499 654, 013 67,870 231,- 613 11,673 49, 336 14,532 1858 167, 164 215, 991 233,651 1,293,328 591,965 439, 017 41, 569 150, 264 4,738 17,858 8,377 1859 29, 904 38,002 191, 879 1, 138, 525 105, 668 93, 273 41, 974 165,976 5,390 22,554 4,287 1860 137, 740 181,044 178, 688 1,064,649 270, 815 212, 599 46, 963 181, 173 4,446 18, 482 15,531 1861 1, 637, 845 2,303,315 404,813 2, 429, 774 757, 704 511, 845 41, 977 140, 130 3,186 11, 742 22,303 Table DDDD. Exports of flour and grain from Ballimore to foreign countries. (Compiled from official documents.) RYE, OATS, WHEAT. WHEAT FLOUR. INDIAN CORN. CORN MEAL. RYE HEAL. AND SMALL Year ending — GRAIN. Bushels. DoUars. Barrels. Dollars. Bushels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Dollars. June 30, 1856 274, 937 537, 236 587, 993 4,776,175 609,878 453, 546 50,822 190, 076 4,367 26,781 123,023 1857 989,087 1,581,637 541,427 3,638,737 562, 099 375, 438 61, 5B9 309,066 4,470 19, 943 32, 970 1858 249, 031 308, 657 551, 088 2, 909, 679 489, 533 334, 576 54, 448 196, 869 1,095 4,033 33,423 1859 63,649 73,802 345,891 2, 055, 537 167,690 150,890 52,799 211, 131 817 3,475 27,822 1860 15, 045 20, 03? 363, 493 2, 183, 487 324, 052 180, 882 51,525 196,393 681 2,685 31, 563 1861 1,097,416 1,563,765 444,026 2, 605, 568 1,015,777 697,000 29,399 96,955 341 1,419 18, 527 Table DDDDD. Exports of flour and grain from Portland to foreign countries. (Compiled from official documents.) Year ending- WHEAT. WHEAT FLOUR. INDIAN CORN. CORN MEAL. RYE »EAL. RYE, OATS, AND SMALL GRAIN. Bushels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Bushels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. Dollars. June 30 1856 8,483 3,621 6,598 3,706 4,347 95, 839 78, 636 27,468 34, 874 21, 961 26, 443 370, 596 689 31b 938 653 306 928 660 795 154 784 713 354 3,081 2,952 536 1,899 3,825 1,233 100 29 263 734 145 1,328 5,358 1,464 1,459 113 6.3, 197 64,407 1857 . . . 1858 181)9 1860 9,378 508,349 9,652 619,298 1831 INTRODUCTION. cxliii Imports of wheat, corn, andjlour into Great Britain and Ireland during tlie past three years- (Compiled from British Board of Trade returns.) Countries. 18G1. 1862. 1863. Wheat: From Kussia . .... Quartars. 1,041,461 1,027,733 228, 157 122,248 214,146 180,903 231,044 339,811 2,507,744 549,525 470,043 Quarters. 1,327,158 1,450,484 145, 338 93, 161 156,701 224,835 390,068 759, 036 3,724,770 861,452 336, 267 Quarters. 1, 046, 378 Prussia 1,017,807 128, 155 Mecklenberff ...... ...... 98, 800 73,013 34,034 Turkey and Danube Effvpt 95,811 555,290 United States 2, 008, 708 483,230 111,275 Total wheat 6,912,815 9,469,270 5,622,501 Indian corn.— Quarters 3, 090, 352 2,728,791 2,971,872 Flour: Cwts. 279, 609 460,775 3,794,865 805, 339 812,350 Cwts. 256,973 790, 040 4,499,534 1,108,591 551, 975 Cwts. 306,216 1,367,938 France - .. United States 2,531,822 883,352 129,648 British America. . .... . Other countries .-.-.. ... Total flour 6,152,938 7,207,113 5,218,976 From the foregoing table it will be seen that of the imports of wheat into Great Britain and Ire- land during the three years named, 37.5 per cent, were from the United States, 15.9 per cent, from Prussia, and 15.5 per cent, from Russia. Of the imports of flour into that kingdom during the same period, 58.3 per cent, were from the United States, and 14.1 per cent, from France. The following table shows the aggregate imports of wheat into Great Britain and Ireland from the five leading grain-exporting countries during the ten years ending with 1863 : From — Qaarters. United States 12, 968, 574 Prussia 8, 340, 802 Kussia 7, 18G, 493 Egypt 4, 152, 230 Canada 2, 441, 505 The following table, furnished by our consul at Odessa, shows the total exports of grain, flour, and meal from Russia, one of the chief grain-exporting countries in Europe, from 1857 to 1862, inclusive: Wheat bushels Eye do.. Oats ...do.. Barley do.. Peas do.. Corn do.. Flour and meal do.. Linseed and rape-seed do.. Total bushels From Odessa. 36,003,030 5,645,792 13,647,162 11,498,028 698, 082 12,040,842 1,101,744 7,300,088 88,934,766 From southern ports. 94,512,072 7,812,216 15,9.58,458 14,077,050 698,084 12, 110, 380 1,868,904 20,983,296 168,020,560 From all Kussia. 119,383,752 53,479,296 53,404,554 24,338,544 2,050,002 13,271,592 5,766,780 44,583,796 316,278,316 cxliv INTRODUCTION. Compared with that of Russia, the grain trade of the United States is but irf its infancy, and yet in wheat, flour, meal, and Indian corn, the exports of the United States, during the six years ending 1862, compare favorably with those of Russia, as the following table shows : Total exports of wheat, corn, flour, and meal from the United States and from Russia, from 1857 to 1862 inclusive. From United States, From RuBSia. Wheat, bushels 99,181,325 119,383,752 Cora, bushels - - - - - 38, 888, 758 13, 271, 592 Flour and meal, bushels 116,689,519 5,766,780 Total 254, 759, 602 138, 422, 124 Deducting the linseed and rape-seed, which do not properly come under the classification, the total exports of all kinds of grain, flour, and meal from Russia, as furnished in the previous table, for six years ending 1862, amount to 261,694,520 bushels, while the exports of wheat, corn, flour, and meal alone from the United States amount to 254,759,602 bushels, as demonstrated in detail in the foregoing exhibit. THE INTERNAL GRAIN TRADE. The exportation of grain to foreign countries, however, does not by any means indicate, the full extent of the grain trade of any country. The progress of the arts and manufactures, and the entire devotion of a large portion of some of the southern States to the cultivation of cotton, tobacco, sugar and rice, have created very attractive home markets in the eastern, middle, and southern States ; and, although the export demand is always of great advantage to the agriculturist, it is the certain home market upon which he has mainly to depend. Without this, whenever the export demand falls oif materially, as it sometimes does when Europe has extraordinary crops, the agricultural interest would be so uncertain in its character that but few would be willing to engage extensively in the production of the various cereals. This feature of the trade has for many years engaged the attention of leading statesmen, and legislation has been shaped more or less for the last quarter of a century, towards fos- tering and encouraging the establishment of manufactories of all kinds on this continent, so as to attract labor and capital from the manufacturing populations of the old world, and render us more independent of foreign countries. That great progress has been made in this direction, the present position of the grain trade fully demonstrates. For instance, in 1860 the single State of Illinois (according to the census returns) pro- duced 23,837,023 bushels of wheat, and the whole amount exported from the United States to foreign countries during the same year (including flour reduced to wheat) was only 17,213,133 bushels. With regard to Indian corn, the value of a home market is even more apparent. In 1860 Illinois produced 115,174,777 bushels, and there was exported during that year altogether only 15,448,507 bushels, a mere fraction of the product of one State. The following table shows the comparison between the production and the exportation of grain in the United States : WHEAT. Production. 'WJieat and flour exported. Bushels. Bushels. 1850 100, 485, 944 7, 535, 901 I860 173, 104, 924 17, 213, 133 INDIAIV CORN. Production. Exported. Bushels. Bushels. 1850 592,071,104 6,595,092 1860 838, 792, 740 15, 448, 507 INTRODUCTION. cxlv Notwithstanding the great increase in the production of grain, the increased population has been gradually diverted from agricultural pursuits to those of manufactures, and the result is that those very States which half a century ago were exporting grain, are now almost entirely dependent on the west for their supply of breadstuffs. The following extract from the message of Governor Andrew to the legislature of Massachusetts at its last session, supplies a clear illustration of this point : "Foreign statistical writers differ considerably in their estimates of the cereal consumption of nations. McCulloch at the yearly consumption of England at one 'quarter' of wheat, or eight bushels, to each inhabitant. France, feeding more on bread and less on meat, is estimated as high as ten bushels. But New England, consuming largely of fish and other animal food, possibly may not exceed seven bushels to each person. At seven bushels each, her 3,135,293 inhabitants would consume 21,947,601 bushels. The census of 1860 shows that her own product of cereals was : Of wheat, only 1, 077, 285 bushels. Of rye, only 1, 617, 560 Of Indian corn, only 9, 099, 570 " Total yield of cereals grown in New England 11, 594, 445 " " But Massachusetts, with a population of 1,231,066, produced less breadstuffs in proportion than either of the other New England States. While her population would, at seven bushels each, call for 8,617,462 bushels, her actual production of cereals was : Of wheat, only 119, 783 bushels. Of rye, only 383, 085 Of Indian corn, only , 2, 157, 063 " Her total being only 2, 659, 931 " " Her residue of breadstuffs, purchased of the region to the north and west, allowing seven bushels for each mhabitant in the year 1860, was 5,952,531 bushels; or, if she consumed at the rate of eight bushels, the computation of English consump- tion by McCulloch, her purchase must have been 7,183,597 bushels. More than seven-eighths of the whole cereal yield of Massachusetts was Indian com, of which a very large portion must have been fed to animals. He* proportional purchase, there- fore, must have been much larger than the average purchase of New England. The annual consumption of purchased flour by New England, at an estimate which is sustained by the computation which I have already made, is something near 3,500,000 barrels, or more than one barrel to each inhabitant. In the year 1862, more than 800,000 barrels of western and northern flour were sold in Boston for domestic consumption, or three-fourths of a barrel for each person in Massachusetts. " I venture to affirm that the consumption of western agricultural products within the six States of New England, includ ing flour, grain an4 animal food, used for the support of man and the forage of cattle, swine, and horses, during the year 1863, reSjChed the value of $50,000,000, the proportion of which taken by Massachusetts exceeded $20,000,000." The opening of the Erie canal to Lake Erie, on the 25th October, 1825, was the commencement of a new era in the internal grain trade of the United States, as it connected the waters of the great lakes with those of the Atlantic, affording a navigable water-course through the entire State of New York. To the pioneer, the agriculturist, and the merchant, this grand avenue developed a new world, and instituted what is now the commerce of the lakes. The following table shows the total receipts of flour and wheat at tide-water by the Erie and Champlain canals for a period of twenty-nine years : 19 cxlvi INTRODUCTION. Total receipts of flour and wheat at tide-water by the New York canals. Years. Flour. Wheat. Years. Flour. Wheat. J83';. 183G. 1837. 1838. 1839. 1840. 1841. 1842. 1843. 1844. 1845. 184G. 1847. 1848. 1849. Barrels. 999, 125 928, 116 914, 171 1,079,001 992,503 1,834,727 1,647,155 1, 588, 368 2, 073, 708 2,322,204 2,518,150 3, 062, 677 3,952,972 3, 130, 575 3,262,096 Bushels. ,688,265 824,855 592, 637 551,589 582,752 1,559,859 912,443 938,417 827, 346 1,262,249 1,620,033 2,950,633 4,136,832 3, 116, 134 2,388,314 1850. 1851. 1852. 1853. 1854. 1855. 1856. 1857. 1858. 1859. 1860. 1861. 1862.. 1863., Barrels. 3,256,085 3, 358, 465 3, 464, 108 3,063,742 1,249,453 1,290,149 1,098,000 835,546 1,898,908 903,296 1,240,908 1,530,775 1,826,509 1,560,800 Bushels. 2,670,754 3,163,682 6,754,946 9,432,657 3,523,800 5,426,285 11,741,366 5,763,400 8,324,966 5,110,533 19,204,000 29,632,40(1 32,667,866 22,206,900 N Years. Grain, bushels. 1857 16, 142, 310 1858 23, 686, 374 1859 18, 049, 798 I860 41, 122, 100 1861 62, 275, 951 1862 74, 811, 877 1863 66, 713, 000 The following is an exhibit of the total receipts of all kinds of grain at tide-water by the Erie and Chamblain canals for a series of years : Total receipts of all kinds of grain at tide-water hy the New York canals. Years Grain, bushels. 1849 11, 986, 690 1850. 11, 585, 619 1851 16, 762, 613 1852 19, 583, 875 1853 19, 316, 019 1854 23, 796, 038 1855 21, 613, 904 1856 30,793 225 The Mississippi river was the only outlet to the ocean for .the entire northwestern territory, com- prising now the northwestern States, prior to the opening of the Erie canal in 1825, but the comple- tion of this great work rendered the country west of the lakes attractive to the enterprising popula- tions of the eastern States and of Europe, and the tide of emigration soon began to flow westward. The construction of the Welland and other Canadian canals, a few years later, connected Lake Erie with Lake Ontario, and thus opened another avenue to the seaboard by the St. Lawrence river. From that period do we date the rise and progress of the northwest, as well as of the internal grain trade. Those counties in Ohio bordering on Lake Erie became settled first,, and as Jate as 1835 that State was the only grain-exporting territory on the lakes, there having passed through the Erie canal on that year 86,233 barrels of flour, and 1,354,995 bushels of wheat, all the product of Ohio. Michigan began to be settled in the early part of the present century, but it is stated in a copy of the Detroit Gazette, dated 1818, that "from four to five hundred farmers, in addition to those already in the Territory, would be needed to supply the demand for breadstuflfs for local consumption." The deficiency at that period was made up by shipments from Ohio. From 1825 to 1830 the population of Michigan began to increase very rapidly, and in 1843 the exportation of grain from that State embraced 106,181 bushels of wheat, 2,582 bushels of corn, 275 bushels of oats, and 263,083 barrels of flour. It was not till about the year 1830, however, that the resources of the fertile territory lying between Lake Michigan and the Mississippi river began to be developed. The first shipment of grain from Lake Michigan, of which there is any record, was made in the year 1836, when the brig John H. Kenzie took on board at Grand Haven, Michigan, 3,000 bushels of wheat for the port of Buffalo. INTRODUCTION. cxlvii The first shipment of grain from the western shore of Lake Michigan, of which there is any record, was made in 1838, consisting of only thirty-nine, bags of wheat. This was the first shipment of grain from Chicago, a port which in 1863 exported not less than 18,298,532 bushels of wheat and flour, and 54,741,839 bushels of grain of all kinds. The first shipment of grain from Wisconsin was made at the port of Milwaukie in 1841, consist- ing of about 4,000 bushels of wheat, which was purchased on Canadian account and forwarded there. The exports of grain and flour from this same port only twenty years later, amounted to 16,317,322 bushels, consisting chiefly of wheat. In 1848 the Illinois and Michigan canal, which connects Lake Michigan with the Illinois river, was completed. This greatly stimulated the grain trade of the lakes, as it provided a water-course from the heart of the fertile prairies of Illinois to the Atlantic ocean. The next great step towards the development of the grain resources of the lake basin was made in the year 1849, when the era of railroad communication was inaugurated by the opening of the Galena and Chicago Union railroad to Fox river, which was soon afterwards extended and completed to the Mississippi. In 1852 the receipts of grain and flour by this railroad amounted to 1,658,725 bushels, and in 1863 there were received by the same road 11,395,649 bushels of grain of all kinds. The success of the Galena railroad soon stimulated other enterprises of the same nature, until now the territory lying between Lake Michigan and the Mississippi river is crossed by about fifteen difierent lines. The same system of railroads is also being extended west of the Mississippi across the States of Missouri, Iowa, and Minnesota, into Kansas and Nebraska, and it is not improbable that but a few years will elapse before the grain product of these young frontier States will be as large as that of Iowa or Minnesota at present. The number of miles of railroad built between 1850 and 1860, in six of the western States, was 9,119, as follows; States. 1850. 1860. Inc'se in miles. Michiffan ....... . . 342 20 799. 33 922. 50 679. 75 2, 867. 75 2,999.50 2,125.75 457. 33 AVisconsin ..--.. . . ... ... 902.50 679. 75 Illinois . .... ..... 110. 50 575.25 228 2, 757. 25 Ohio 2,424.25 1,897.75 Total miles ........... 1,275.75 10, 394. 58 9,118.83 The rapid progress of the grain trade of the northwest is fully demonstrated by the increase in the commerce of the lakes. As late as the year 1845 the tonnage of the lakes consisted of only 380 vessels of all classes, with an aggregate tonnage of 76,000 tons, while at the close of the season of 1863 there were employed in the carrying trade of the lakes — three-fourths of which consists of the trans- portation of grain — 1,870 vessels of all classes, with an aggregate tonnage of 470,034 tons, valued at $16,720,800. The following table exhibits the total tonnage of vessels engaged in the commerce of the lakes during the past six years : Tonnage of the lakes during the past six years. Years. Tonnage. 1858 405, 301 1859 - 392, 783 1860 391, 220 18C1 389, 611 1862 454, 893 1863 '. 470, 034 cxlviii INTRODUCTION. But, rapid as has been the increase in the facilities for the transportation of grain and flour from the west to the east, it is evident, from the high rates of freight that have ruled during the past tvpo or three years, that they are still inadequate to meet the requirements of the trade. The foUow^ing table shovv^s the receipts of flour and grain at the port of Buffalo during the past twenty-eight years : Table E. Receipts of Jlour and grain at Buffalo for twenty-eight years. Years. Flour, barrels. Wheat, bushels Corn, bushels. Oats, bushels. . Barley, bushels. Rye, bushels. Total flour and grain, bushels. 1836 139, 178 126,805 277,620 294, 125 597, 142 730,040 734, 308 917,517 915, 030 746,750 1,374,529 1,857,000 1,249,000 1,207,435 1,103,0.39 1,258,224 1, 299, 513 975, 557 739,756 936, 761 1,126,048 845, 953 1,536,109 1,420,333 1,122,335 2, 159, 591 2, 846, 022 2,978,089 304, 090 450, 350 933, 117 1,117,262 1,004,561 1, 635, 000 1,555,420 1,827,241 2, 177, 500 1,770,740 4, 744, 184 6,489,100 4,520,117 4,943,.978 3,681,347 4, 167, 121 5,549,778 5,420,043 3,510,782 8, 022, 126 8,465,671 8, 334, 179 10,671,550 9, 234, 652 18,502,649 27,10.5,219 30,435,831 21,240,348 204, 355 94,490 34, 148 28, 640 2, 553 6,577 4,876 ],.^>00 3,267 909 1,239,351 1,184,685 •2,362,851 2,587,887 4,061,598 5,502,525 5,687,468 6,642.610 6,610,713 5,581,790 1837 1838 1839 1840 71,327 201, 031 454, 530 223,968 137,978 54,200 1,455,258 2, 862, 800 2,298,000 3,321,651 2, 593, 378 5,988,775 5,136,746 8,065,793 10, 108, 983 9,711,430 9,633,277 5,713,611 6, 621, 668 3,11.3,653 11,386,217 21,024,657 24,288,627 20,086,952 1841 14,144 2,150 1,268 1,332 456 1842 4,710 1843 2,849 18, 017 23, 300 218, 300 446, 000 560,000 362, 384 357,580 1,140,340 2,596,231 1,580,655 4,401,739 2, 693, 222 1,733,382 1,214,760 2,275,241 1,394,502 1,209,594 1,797,905 2, 624, 932 7, 322, 187 1844 1,617 1845 1846 47, 530 28,250 70,787 17, 889 13, 366, 167 19, 153, 187 13,641,012 14,665,188 12, 059, 559 17,740,781 20,390,504 15,956,526 22,252,235 24,472,278 25,753,907 19, 578, 695 27, 812, 980 22, 530, 722 37, 053, 115 61,460,601 72,872,454 64,735,510 1847 1848 6 1849 1650 3,600 142,773 497, 913 401, 098 313, 885 62, 304 46, 327 37, 844 308, 371 361,560 262, 158 313,757 423, 124 641,449 1851 10,6.52 112,251 107, 152 177, 066 299, 591 245, 810 48,536 125,214 124,693 80, 822 337,764 791, 564 422, 309 1852 1853 1854 1855 1856 1857 1858 1859 1860 1861 1862 186.1 The next most important receiving point on the lakes is the port of Oswego, on Lake Ontario. The following table shows the receipts at that port for sixteen years : Table F. — Receipts of flour and grain at Oswego for sixteen years. Years. 1848 1849 1850 1851 1852 1853 1854 1855, 1856 1857. 1858. 1859. 1860. 1861. 1862. 1863. Flour into wheat, bushels. Wheat, bushels. 448,510 1,588,790 1,512,885 1,949,645 1,361,715 1,956,075 836, 335 1,123,215 1,014,615 506, 915 483, 315 324,755 606, 995 595,280 1,170,910 570, 460 5 6, 4, 9, 10, 10, 8, 642, 683 615,677 847, 384 231,899 525, 309 436, 391 492, 333 365, 783 382, 398 353, 026 595, 433 874, 593 651,564 121,446 982, 132 785, 425 Corn, bushels. 373, 185 383,230 426,121 1,251,500 1,055,043 787, 672 2,632,274 2, 860, 900 3,589,211 2, 003, 992 2,913,618 804, 646 5, 019, 400 4,642,262 4,523,962 2, 076, 367 Oats, bushels, 03, 136 133,697 113,463 175, 984 90, 609 32, 806 323,296 228, 097 169,758 14, 603 637, 933 251,534 388,416 116, 384 187,284 423, 147 Eye, bushels. 51,765 31, 426 86, 439 106, 518 31,279 69,301 43,215 281, 021 339, 503 74,436 98, 008 183, 437 24^311 381,687 130, 175 110,355 Barley, bushels. 181,560 65,256 120, 652 194, 858 134,697 43, 070 101,436 172,215 110,019 281,210 549, 967 778, 419 1,326,915 1,173,551 1,050,364 1,824,667 Total flour and grain, bushels. 4,760,8.19 5,818,076 6,106,944 7,910,404 9, 198, 652 10,335,315 6,428,889 10,031,231 13,605,539 8,234,182 11,278,274 7,216,-384 17,237,501 17,030,610 18,055,827 14,402,421 INTRODUOTION. cxlix The following is an exhibit of the receipts of flour and grain at the port of Toledo during the past five years : Table G. Receijits of flour and grain at Toledo for Jive years. Years. Flour, barrels. Wheat, bushels. Corn, bushels. Oats,bushels. Eye, bushels. Barley, bushels. Total flour aud grain, bushels. 1859 688, 103 720,517 1,406,476 1,585,325 1,126,260 2, 312, 583 5,272,690 6,277,407 9,827,629 6, 194, 130 714,291 5,333,751 5, 312, 038 3,813,709 1,705,096 6,467,389 14, ,504, 903 18,706,510 21,910,228 14, 326, 459 1860 137,538 41,428 234,759 733,796 35,957 31, 193 44, 368 24,520 122, 382 12,064 63, 138 37,608 1861 1862 1863 .. On Lake Michigan, Chicago stands foremost as a general grain-shipping port. The following table shows the shipments of flour anS grain from that port during the past twenty-six years: Table H. Shipments of fl,our and grain from Chicago for twenty-six years. (Compiled from statistics of the Board of Trade.) Years. Flour and wheat, bushels Com, bushels. Oats, bushels. Eye, bushels. Barley, bushels. Total flour and grain, bushels. 1838 1839 1840 1841 1842 1843 1844 1845 1846 1847 1848 1849 1850 1851 1852. 1853. 1854. 1855. 1856. 1857. 1858. 1859. 1860. 1861- 1862. 1863. 1. 2, 7, 9, 10, 10, 10, 15 23, 22, 18, 78 3,678 10, 000 40, 000 586, 907 688, 907 923,494 024,620 599, 819 136,994 386, 000 192, 809 387,989 799, 380 941,470 680,998 644, 860 115,270 419, 365 783,292 909,243 759, 359 892,857 885,553 508, 143 298, 532 67, 315 550, 460 644,848 262, 013 . 3,221,317 2,757,011 2,780,253 6,837,899 7,517,678 11,129,668 6,814,615 7,493,212 4,217,654 13,700,113 24,372,725 29,452,610 24,906,934 38,892 65,280 26, 849 186, 054 605, 827 2,030,317 1,748,493 3,239,987 1,888,533 1,014,547 416,778 1,498,134 1, 174, 177 1,091,698 1,633,237 3, 112, 366 9,909,175 17, 315 82, 162 41, 153 20, 132 590 7,569 131,449 156, 642 393, 813 871,796 683,946 31,453 22,872 19,997 127, 028 120,275 148,421 92,032 19,051 17,993 132,020 486,218 267,749 226,534 532, 195 943,252 3, 10, 40, 586, 688, 923, 1,024, 1,599, 2,243, 3,001, 2, 895, 1,858, 4,646, 5, 873, 6,422, 12,902, 16,633, 21,583, 18, 032, 20, 040, 16,768, 31, 109, 50,511, 56,477, 54,741, 78 678 000 000 907 907 494 620 819 201 740 959 928 521 141 181 320 645 221 678 178 857 059 862 110 ;^#'' 839 As a grain-shipping port, that of Milwaukie, on Lake Michigan, is the second in importance, shipments of flour and grain at this port during the past nineteen years were as follows : The cl INTRODUCTION. Table I. Shipments of flour and grain from MiZwaiikic for nineteen years. (Compiled from statistics of Chamber of Commerce.; Years. Flour, barrels. AVheat, bushels. Com, bushels. Oats, bushels. Eye, bushels. Barley, bushels. Total flour and grain, bushels. 1845 7,550 15,756 34,380 92,732 136,657 100,017 51,889 92,995 104, 055 145, 032 181,568 188,455 228, 442 298,688 282,956 457, 343 674,474 711, 405 603,526 95,510 213,448 598,411 602,474 1, 136, 023 297,578 317,285 564,404 956,703 1,809,452 2,641,746 2,761,979 2, 581, 311 3,994,213 4,732,957 7,568,608 13,300,495 14,915,680 12,837,620 133,260 292,228 770,311 1,076,134 1,840,808 820,033 702,290 1,772,753 1,981,219 3,549,301 3,758,900 3,720,313 3,727,568 6,162,234 6,552,896 9, 995, 000 16,710,580 18,712,389 16,993,335 1846 1847 1848 3849 2,500 5,000 13,828 2,220 270 164,908 112,132 218 472 43,958 41,364 37,204 1,485 9,489 88,989 4,000 2,100 7,892 363,841 131,716 404, 999 13,833 5,443 2,775 562, 067 299,002 64,682 1,200 79, 094 831,600 15,000 15,270 103, 840 322,621 291,890 331,339 63,379 10, 398 800 63, 178 53,216 28,056 5,220 44, 800 133, 449 1850 18.51 1852 54,692 80,365 113,443 * 20,030 1853 1854 1855 1856 1857 , 1858 5,378 11,577 9,735 29,810 126,301 84,047 1859 1860 1862 The following table shows the total amount of grain, including flour, shipped from all the ports on Lake Michigan during the past six years : Table J. Total shipment eastward of grain and flour from Lake Michigan ports for six years. (Compiled from the statistics of the various boards of trade.) Ports. 1858. 1859. 1860. 1861. 1862. 1863. Chicago Milwaukie Kacine Kenosha Waukegan Sheboygan , Port Washington. Green Bay Manitowoc St. Joseph Michigan City . . . Bushels. 20,040,178 6,162,234 1, 085, 132 238,817 48,000 206, 173 31,759 Bushels. 16,768,857 6,552,896 1,435,000 430, 000 70, 000 275,000 50, 000 140, 000 52, 000 15, 000 30,000 78,000 Bushels. 31,109,059 9,995,000 907,256 295,003 195,000 214,862 65,235 350, 033 55,000 25,000 50,511,862 16,710,580 910,767 384,000 165, 000 219,262 69,610 448,722 51,^310 18,000 Bushels. 56,477,110 18,712,389 1,230,000 235,454 124,000 452, 470 122, 350 780,902 84,000 Total 27,879,293 25,829,753 43,211,448 69,489,113 78,218,675 Bushels. 54,741,839 16, 993, 335 881,416 141,670 120, 000 360, 752 107,862 1,288,790 75, 000 74,710,664 A glance at the figures in the foregoing table fully demonstrates the marvellous progress which has taken place in the grain trade of the northwest. In history, ancient or modern, we may search in vain for a parallel. The following table shows the entire movement of flour and grain eastward from the western and northwestern States, (including, in this instance, Canada West, whose products intermingle, in a genera;! statement such as this, with those of the United States :) INTRODUCTION, cli Table K. Total movement of flow and grain from the west to the east, by all the routes, for eight years. (Compiled from o£Scial records.) Received at — 1856. 1857. • Flour. Wheat. Corn. Other grain. Flour. Wheat Com. Other grain. Barrels. 449, 797 215, 000 350, 000 1,126,048 304,524 202,930 354,964 65,000 712, 038 Bushels. BwsheU. Bushels. 487, lOO 405, 872 Barrels. 426,801 351,011 354,072 845,953 180,194 101,363 36i;578 60,472 037, 052 BushAs. Bushels. Bushels. 256, 183 206,793 Dunkirk 93,433 8,a34,179 148,138 5,353,026 598, 523 477, 375 1,708,965 8,465,671 9,633,277 2,025,519 900, 000 619,280 37, 432 50,000 37,366 5,713,611 8,382,398 610, 937 500, 000 1, 546, 352 3,589,211 377, 973 45, 000 637, 969 2,003,992 517,076 40, 537 383, 162 14 740 49,408 38,105 Montreal 1 3,780,301 19,505,358 14,283,432 4,562,569 3,318,496 16,713,639 8,658,378 2,236,678 Table K — Continued. Keceived at — Flour. Wheat. Com. Other grain. 1859. Flour. Wheat. Com. Other grain. Western terminus of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad. . Western temunus of the Pennsylvania Central railroad . Dunkirk ... Buffalo Suspension bridge Oswego Ogdensburg Cape Vincent Montreal Rochester Total Barrels. 682,314 450, 000 331, 007 1, 536, 109 200, 410 95, 720 381,624 72,633 664, 275 7,110 4,421,2 Bushels. Bushels. 186, 449 10, 671, 550 102, 694 6,595,433 790, 178 410, 191 1, 769, 482 276, 515 94, 905 6, 621, 668 330, 871 250, 000 24, 965 2, 708, 826 2, 913, 018 720,236 40, 000 105, 087 1, 285, 908 44,126 156, 631 136, 5.17 9,865 Barrels. 446, 403 350, 000 432, 052 1, 420, 333 41, 374 64, 941 294, 569 9,390 597, 583 1,764 Bushels. 17, 800 263, 483 9, 234, 652 57, 562 4, 874, 593 769, 010 266, 735 638, 700 416, 821 77,914 3, 113, 653 804, 646 298, 519 20,100 71,430 20,802,492 10,495,514 4, 947, 729 3, 658, 409 16, 539, 356 4,386,262 196, 466 150, 000 14, 400 1, 880, 755 73, 346 1,212,390 64, 702 216, 435 204,652 8,900 4, 022, 046 Table K — Continued. Received at — 1860. Flour. Wheat. Com. Other grain. 1861. Wheat. Corn. Other grain. Western terminus of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad. . Western terminus of the Pennsylvania Central railroad. Dunkirk Buffalo Suspension l)ridge Oswego Ogdensburg Cape Vincent Montreal Rochester ^ Total Barrels. 352,413 426, 660 542, 765 1, 122, 335 650, 000 121, 185 248,200 28,940 608, 309 5,250 4,106,057 Bushels. Bushels. 500, 888 18, 502, 649 644, 081 11,386,217 9, 651, 564 565, 022 203, 878 2, 686, 728 425, 765 5, 019, 400 867,014 73, 300 138, 214 Busltels, 126, 393 864, 160 8,843 1, 552, 574 1, 875, 000 1, 959, 642 48,211 186, 597 915, 648 10, 725 Barrels. 270,000 1,045,028 736, 529 2,159,591 758, 915 119, 056 441, 488 65, 407 937, 324 2,500 Bushels. Bushels. 604, 561 27, 105, 219 230,400 21,024,657 10,121,446 677, 386 276, 610 7, 738, 084 520, 618 4, 642, 262 1, 119, 594 124, 411 1, 565, 477 32,536,494 18,128,226 6,535,8.18 47, 043, 924 28, 706, 801 Bushels. 80,000 1, 948, 256 7,175 2, 532, 770 2, 675, 1)48 1, 671, 622 25, 666 104, 591 2S0, 058 10, 990 9, 337, 076 clii INTRODUCTION. Table K— Oontiuued. Received at — 1862. 1863. Flour. Wheat. Com. Other grairu Flour. Wheat. Corn. Other grain. Western terminuB of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad Barrels. 690,000 890,696 1, 095, 365 2,846,033 875,000 335,383 576,394 48,576 1,174,603 1,000 Bushels. Bushels. BusJiels. 550, OOO 1,622,893 10,173 3,849,620 2,750,000 1,467,823 18,855 47, 047 436,387 6,622 Barrels. 750, 000 850, 000 620, 230 2,978,089 775,000 115,292 475,465 24,236 1, 193, 108 1,500 Bushels. Bushels. Bushels. 450,000 1,800,000 11,789 8,385,945 1,500,000 2, 364, 169 25,000 15 730 Western terminus of the Pennaylvnnia Central railroad . Dunkirk 112,061 30,435,831 149, 654 24, 288, 627 86,905 21,240,348 191,035 20,086,952 Buffalo Suspension bridge Oswego L 10,982,132 C89, 930 316,403 8,534,172 130, 000 4,528,962 1, 120, 376 349,369 3,661,261 8,785,425 600,299 306,856 5, 509, 119 85, 000 2,676,367 1,057,299 81,698 862, 534 Ogdensburg .... Capo Vincent 1,405,478 25,000 Total 8,433,037 51,220,529 32,998,049 10,749,430 7,782,920 36,513,952 24,955,885 15,983,111 THE GRAIN TEADB OF THE ST. LAWRENCE RIVER. The grain trade of the St. Lawrence river has of late years attracted the attention of the leading statesmen and merchants, both of Canada and the United States. The construction of the Welland canal, and the completion of the various Canadian canals around the rapids of the St. Lawrence, pro- vided an uninterrupted water-course from the head of Lake Michigan to Montreal and Quebec. For many years the trade of this river was confined chiefly to the products of Upper Canada, but the increased production of grain in the northwestern States during the past ten years has so crowded the other avenues to the seaboard that the trade has naturally sought an outlet to the ocean by the St- Lawrence. The following table shows the receipts of flour and grain at Montreal during the past three years : Receipts of jlour and, grain at Montreal for three years. Articles. Flour, tarrels... Wheat, bushels . Com, " Barley, " Oats, " Rye, 1861. By Grand Trank railway. 336, 466 1,187,708 6,931 18,292 By Lachine canal. 758, 873 6,550,376 1,565,477 125, 818 104, 107 24,710 1862. By Grank Trunk railway. 402,221 754,445 11,876 13,194 By Lachine canal. 772, 381 7,779,727 2,661,261 325, 054 93,598 82,665 1863. By Grand Trunk railway. 457,926 539,020 1,173 25,447 51,251 By Lachine canal. 735, 182 4, 970. 099 861, 361 273, 525 352,721 33,269 The following table shows the exports of flour and grain from Montreal during the past three years: Exports of flour and grain from Montreal for three years. Articles. Flour, barrels . . . Wheat, bushels. Corn, Oats, " Barley, " Peas, 1861. 605,942 5,584,727 1,477,144 276,375 239,829 1862. 597,477 6,500,796 1,774,546 652, 144 1863. 526, 155 3,741,146 638,281 3,086,835 709,239 754,414 INTRODUCTION. cliii As demonstrative of the nature of the receipts of grain at Montreal, it is necessary to state, that of the 4,970,099 bushels of wheat received during 1863, 1,961,649 bushels were from Milwaukie, and 1,079,772 bushels from Chicago. Of the corn received in 1863, nearly all of it was imported from Chicago, as there was shipped from that port for Kingston not less than 698,375 bushels, where it was transferred to barges and towed down the St. Lawrence to Montreal. Of the exports of grain at Montreal, the oats and barley are nearly all shipped to the United States. The chief grain-shipping point on the Canadian side of Lake Ontario is Toronto, wherefrom the following table shows the shipments of flour and grain in 1863, with the ports of destination: Shipments of flour and grain from Toronto in 1863. Sliipped to — Flour. Wheat. Barley. Peas. Barrels. 14, 740 Bushels. 268, 001 22,186 2,100 6,052 353,280 Bushels. 288, 108 Busliels. 40, 186 600 18,532 85,256 750 9,634 lilontreal 10,963 10,978 Other ports 200, 043 , Total in 1863 129, 552 106,219 852,262 933,275 299, 086 219, 147 57 149 Total in 1862 47, 382 Besides the above, there were shipped 92,936 bushels of oats — all to Oswego. % From the foregoing table it will be seen that of the 1,949,193 bushels of flour and gi'ain of all liinds exported from Toronto, only 811,251 bushels were shipped to Canadian ports. So important has the grain trade of the northwestern States become to the Canadians, that it has stimulated the construction, by Englisli capitalists, of the Great Western railway from Detroit river to Lake Ontario and Niagara river, and the Grand Trunk railway from Detroit river to Quebec and Portland. To cheapen the transportation of grain, lines of propellers are estabUshed, and constantly run during the season of lake navigation, between Lake Michigan ports and Ports Sarnia, and CoUing- wood, on Lake Huron, where produce is transferred to cars, which are run across from Lake Huron to Lake Ontario, where it is again transferred to propellers or sailing vessels, which ply, in connexion with the railroads, between Montreal and Lake Ontario ports. Besides the advantage of cheapening freights, it is claimed that this repeated overhauling of grain, particularly in hot weather, is highly effective in preventing it from becoming heated or musty, as is often the case during hot weather, when it is confined closely in the holds of vessels during long passages. DIHECT TEADE BETWEEN THE LAKJ3S AND EUROPE. During the past ten years various attempts have been made to establish a direct European trade with the lakes, via the St. Lawrence river ; but it has been more successfully prosecuted in the lumber and stave than in the grain trade. The first direct shipment of grain from the lakes to Europe took place in 1856, when the schooner Dean Richmond cleared at Chicago for Liverpool with a cargo of wheat ; but, of about 125 vessels which have cleared from lake ports for the Atlantic ocean since that date, only three or four have been loaded with grain. This failure to establish a direct European grain trade, has been discouraging to merchants, and has led many to despair of ultimate success ; but the chief obstacle seems to be the uusuitableness for ocean navigation of the light-draught schooners which are necessarily employed in order to cross the St. Clair flats and pass through the canals. The want of return cargoes to the lakes has also been a serious detriment to the direct trade, and it is only in seasons of extreme depression in the lake trade, that vessel-owners are willing to embark in such long voyages. 20 cliv INTEODUCTION. To foster the establishment of a direct European grain trade, and also to provide more enlarged facilities for the transportation of the rapidly -increasing products of the west, a variety of measures are being agitated by commercial associations all over the country, as well as by the legislatures of New York and Canada. The following are some of the leading propositions : Fiist. The construction of a ship canal from Greorgian bay to Toronto, via Lake Simcoe, so as to pass vessels of one thousand tons burden from Lake Huron to Lake Ontario. Second. The construction of a ship canal from Georgian bay to the Ottawa and French rivers, «/« Lake Nipissingue, so as to pass vessels of one thousand tons burden from Lake Huron to the St. Lawrence river. Third. The enlargement of the "Welland canal, so as to pass vessels of the size mentioned above. Fourth. The construction of a ship canal around the Falls of Niagara, so as to pass large vessels of deep draught from Lake Erie to Niagara river, and thence to Lake Ontario and the St Lawrence river. Fifth. The enlargement of the New York canals. Sixth. The construction of a ship canal from Chicago, on Lake Michigan, to Lasalle, on the Illi- nois rivej-, and the deepening and improvement of that river, so as to allow steamers and vessels of deep draught to pass from the Mississippi river to Lake Michigan. Seventh. The improvement of Fox river, in Wisconsin, so as to connect the Upper Mississippi with Lake Michigan, and allow the passage of vessels carrying large cargoes of grain and other pro- duce from Minnesota and northern Wisconsin. Eighth. The construction of a ship canal from the head of Lake Michigan to Lake Erie, so as to avoid the long passage around the peninsula of Michigan, '^;^« the Straits of Mackinaw. Of the Four projects connecting Lake Ontario with Lakes Ei'ie and Huron, the three first are Canadian propositions. The accomplishment of eitherof the two first — the Georgian bay and Toronto or the Ottawa ship canal — would greatly shorten the distance from Lake Michigan to Montreal, and also avoid the St. Clair flats, which would have to be deepened and improved so as to enable ocean vessels of deep draugKt to pass. It is feared by many in New York, however, that the construction of a ship canal to the St. Lawrence river would damage the canal interests of that State by diverting a large portion of the grain trade of the lakes from the Erie canal ; but when it is considered that the production of grain in the northwestern States increased from 218,463,583 bushels in 1840 to 642,120,366 bushels in 18^0, and that of the eight food-producing States west of the lakes, embracing an area of 262,549,000 acres, only about 52,000,000 acres were under cultivation in 1860, and that 26,000,000 acres of that have been broken since 1850, no fears need be entertained that any of the outlets to the ocean will be unoccu- pied to the extent of their capacity. The only fear is, that we will not keep pace with the increased production by the provision of increased facilities of transportation. THE HECIPKOCITy TREATY AND THE GRAIN TRADE. By the operation of the reciprocity treaty there is a free interchange of the grain products of Canada and the United States, and the free use of the St. Lawrence river for navigation is accorded to the latter. Since this ti-eaty came into effect the grain trade between the two countries has beer, greatly increased. The following table shows the value of the agricultural products imported into the United States from Canada, and into Canada from the United States, from 1850 to 1861, inclusive : INTRODUCTION. elv Value of imports of agricultural produce into the United States fr am Canada, and into Canada from the United States, Years. Value of imports into United States from Canada. 1850 1^2,706,362 1851 1,9;]7, 283 1862..... ■ 3,277,929 1853 4,949,576 1854 6,295,667 1855 11,801,435 Value of imports into Canada fi-om the United States. $427, 084 676, 327 473, 137 668, 113 1, 500, 521 4, 972, 475 Value of imports iato United States from Canada. 1856.: $11,864,836 1857 7,100,413 1858 5, 740, 305 1859 6,278,361 1860 10,013,799 1861 9,580, 165 Value of imports into Canada from tlie United States. 3, 809, 112 5,272,151 3,385,517 4, 671, 882 4, 603, 114 5, 172, 588 According to the above table it is evident that, hovsrever much the people of the United States may have been benefited by the operations of the reciprocity treaty, it has been more advantageous to the Canadian than to the American agriculturist. THE GRAIN TRADE OF THE MISSISSIPPI EIVEB. The grain trade of the Mississippi and Ohio rivers has, for upw^ards of a quarter of a century, occupied an important place in the commercial history of the United States. In the early part of the present century, before the era of canals and railroads, the tide of emigration forced itself into. the valleys of those rivers and laid the foundations of what soon became large and flourishing settlements. Before Chicago, Milwaukie, and Toledo had existence, other than as small trading posts, Cincinnati, on the Ohio, and St. Louis, on the Mississippi river, were comparatively large towns, with a trade and com- merce which attracted capital from all parts of the world. The Mississippi river was the natural outlet for this trade to the ocean, and New Orleans became at an early day the only exporting point for the grain products of the west. The valley of the Ohio river, embracing the States of Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky, was settled first, and the grain trade of that river proper is therefore the oldest. But the fertile lands of the river tier of counties in Illinois and Missouri soon attracted the attention of agriculturists, and the grain trade of the Mississippi river proper followed; and. as we have shown in a previous chapter, before steamboat navigation had made much progress, the grain was shipped chiefly in rude barges and carefully floated down the Mississippi to New Orleans, where it found a market, and was shipped to foreign ports. And even, at no distant date, all the western grain and flour which found a market in New York or New England was shipped to New Orleans in steamboats, and thence around the Atlantic coast in ocean ships. The following is an exhibit of receipts of grain and flour at Cincinnati during the past eighteen years : Table L. Receipts of fiour and grain at Cincinnati for eighteen years. (Compiled from statistics of Cineinnati Chamber of Commerce. ) Years. 1846. 1847. 1848. 1849. 1850. 1851. 1852.. 1853.. 1854.. 1855.. 1856.. 1857.. 1858.. 1859.. I860.. 1861.. 1862.. 1363.. Flour, banels. 202, 319 512,506 151,518 447, 844 231, 859 482,772 511,042 449, 089 427, 464 342,772 546, 727 485, 089 633, 318 558, 173 517,229 490,619 538, 215 619,7)0 Wheat, bushels. 435, 480 590, 805 570, 813 385, 388 322, 699 388, 600 377, 037 343,649 408, 084 437, 412 1,069,468 737, 723 1,211,543 1,274,685 1,057,118 1,129,007 2, 174, 924 1,741,401 Com, bushels. 57,245 896,258 361,315 344, 810 649,227 489, 195 653,788 723, 334 745, 455 845,597 978,511 1,673,363 1,090,236 1,139,022 1,346,208 1,340,690 1,780,293 1,504,430 Oats, bushels. 106,852 372, 127 194, 557 185,723 191,924 164, 238 197, 868' 283, 251 427, 423 4S0, 178' 403,920 534, 312 598, 950 557,701 894,515 838, 451 1,3:58,950 1,312,000 •Barley, bushels. 90, 225 79, 394 165,528 87, 4f 137, 925 111,257 89, 994 226,844 286,536 204,224 244,792 381,060 400,907 455, 731 352, 829 493,214 323, 884 330, 176 Eye, bushels. 85,821 41,016 24, 336 22,233 23, 397 44, 308 58, 317 33, 670 29,592 53, 164 158,220 113,818 04, 385 82, 572 131,487 157, 50S.I 247, 187 138,935 clvi INTRODUCTION. The following table shows the receipts of flour and grain at St. Louis during the past fourteen years : Table M. Receipts of fiour and grain at St. Tjouis for fourteen years. (Compilcd'from statistics of St. Louis Chamber of Commerce.) Years. Flour, barrels. Wheat, bushels. Corn, bushels. Oats, bushels. Eye, bushels. Barley, bushels. 1850 306, 463 184,715 132, 050 201,487 192,945 226, 450 323, 446 573, 664 387,451 488,700 443, 196 484,000 647, 419 689,241 1,794,721 1,712,776 1,645,387 2, 075, 872 2, 126, 272 3,312,854 3,747,224 3,281,410 3,835,759 3,568,732 3,555,878 2,654,738 3, 850, 3.36 2,703,378 1851 1,457,748 755, 258 1,048,120 1,784,189 2, 947, 285 938,546 2,286,828 892, 104 1,639,579 4,209,794 4, 515, 040 1,734,219 1,299,850 888, 423 848, 850 1,235,000 1,777,873 1,912,974 1,132,932 1,217,887 1,690,010 1,267,624 1,789,234 1,735,157 3, 135, 043 2,771,848 1852 91,662 124,064 114,160 126, 128 127,210 216,574 290, 350 242,262 291,130 201, 484 290, 925 195,650 1853 28,894 1854 1855 111,526 44,210 36, 810 45, 900 123, 056 158,974 117, 080 253, 552 126,700 1856 1857 1858 1859 1860 1861 1862 .- 1863 As New Orleans is the only exporting point for the grain carried down the Mississippi river, the following table is appended, showing the receipts at that port for thirty-one years : Table N. Receipts of flour and grain at New Orleans for thirtii-one years. (Compiled from statistics of New Orleans price current.) Years. 1832. 1833; 1834. 1835. 1836. 1837. 1838. 1839. 1840. 1841. 1842. 1843. 1844. 1845. 1846. 1847. 1848. 1849. 1850. 1851. 1852. 1853. 1854. 1855. 1856. 1857. 1858., 1859., I860.. 1861.. 1862.. Wheat, bbls. and sacks. 10, 1, 6, 2, 17, 63, 2, 138, 118, 86, 64, 403, 833, 149, 238, 57, 88, 64, 47, 184, 31, 869, 775, 401, 29, 13, 71, 36, 038 C90 422 027 280 015 621 886 248 014 759 786 649 181 911 508 797 946 238 943 288 524 962 275 585 116 678 411 Flour, barrels. 221,283 233, 742 345, 831 286,534 287,232 253,500 320, 208 439,984 48^,523 496, 194 439, 688 521,175 502,507 533, 312 837, 985 1,617,675 706,958 1,013,177 591,986 941,106 927,212 808,072 874,256 673, 111 1,120,974 1,290,597 l,538,.742v 1,084,978 965, 860 1,009,201 ■ 281,645 Shelled, sacks. 7,490 65, 620 62, 137 162, 346 287, 182 369, 090 177,751 3.38,795 278, 358 268, 557 338,709 427,552 360,052 390,964 1,160,120 2,386,510 1,083,465 1,705,138 1,114,897 1,298,932 1,397,132 1,225,031 1,740,267 1, 110, 446 1,990,995 1,437,051 1,289,665 759, 438 1,722,039 3, 833, 911 315,652 In ear, barrels. 71,322 91,473 97,774 262,410 255, 975 194,013 270, 924 161,918 152,965 168, 050 240,675 255, 058 165, 354 139,686 358,573 619, 576 509, 583 295,711 42,719 42,526 163, 008 17, 620 48. 404 10,701 41,924 14, 719 62. 405 5,000 36, 092 122,644 22,216 Oats, bbls. and sacks. 1,784 9,029 18, 026 14,264 18, 1.32 32, 180 25,514 38,708 42,885 54,250 63,281 120, 430 130,432 144,262 269, 386 588, 337 467, 219 266,559 325,795 479, 741 463,273 446, 956 586,451 439,978 587, 180 393, 171 568,649 249, 736 659, 550 552,738 35, 348 INTRODUCTION clvii The followmg table shows the exports of flour and grain from New Orleans to foreign countries for a series of years : Tadle 0. Exports of fiour and grain from New Orleans to foreign ports. (Compile J from official documents. ) Year ending June 30 — Flour, biirrels. Wheat, tushels. Com, bushels. Eye, oats, &c., value. 1856 251,501 428, 436 474,906 133, 193 80,541 21,767 1,096,733 1,353,480 596,442 107,031 2, 189 3 2,0-11,711 1,034,402 1,134,1!7 111,522 224, 382 69, 679 $67, 892 2 172 1857 1858 885 1859 ] 029 I860 1 943 1861 971 A comparison of the foregoing tables with those illustrating the grain tiade of the lakes and of the Erie canal, demonstrates the revolution that has taken place in the grain trade of the west. The trade and commerce of the Mississippi river, so far as relates to grain and other produce, has not kept pace with the development of the territory through which it runs, and for which it is the natural highway to the ocean. The old theory that "trade will follow the rivers " has in some respects been disproved. The artificial channels of trade, canals and railroads, have tapped the west and carried its products east- ward across the continent. The grain trade of Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Wisconsin, and even the greater portion of that of Indiana and Ohio, have been diverted almost entirely to the lakes, the Erie canal^ the St. Lawrence river, or the six great trunk lines of railroads that lead Irom the heart of the west to the seaboard. The Mississippi river has been bridged at Rock island, and another bridge is just being completed at Clinton, farther up. The lines of railroads which extend from Lake Michigan to this river are being pushed forward with great rapidity to the Missouri river, and into Kansas and Nebraska, and there is every probability that the grain of these frontier States will also find a market by way of the lakes. Even now grain is being received t Chicago from Kansas and Nebraska via the Missouri river, the Hannibal and St. Joseph railroad, and the Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy railroad. As an outlet to the ocean for the grain trade of the west, the Mississippi river has almost ceased to be depended upon by merchants. There are several reasons for this change : First. The risk of damage to grain and flour that may ba shipped during the summer months through the southern latitudes of the Gulf of Mexico, as compared with the transportation by the northern routes, viz., around the lakes and through the Erie canal, or via the St. Lawrence river. This applies particularly to corn, which is more liable to become heated than any other kind of grain. Second. The uncertainty of river navigation during the summer months, in droughty seasons, and the vexatious and ruinous delays that are apt to occur in consequence. Third. The speedy transportation by railroads and canals on the northern route, as compared with transportation by river to New Orleans, and thence by ocean ships around the Atlantic coast. Fourth. The superior advantages which New York during the past ten or fifteen years has attained as an importing point, as compared with New Orleans, thus ofiering greater inducements to ocean shipping to trade with New York. Fifth. The rapid growth of the cotton, sugar, and tobacco trade at New Orleans, to the exclusion of almost every other branch of trade and commerce. A glance at the table of receipts of grain at New Orleans during the six years previous to the blockade of the Mississippi river, as compared with the great movement of grain during the same period eastward by the Erie canal and the St. Lawjrence river, shows clearly the diversion which has taken place in this trade. The entire receipts of grain in New Orleans in 1860 amounted to ordy clviii INTRODUCTION, 5,198,927 bushels, while the receipts during the same year at the single port of Chicago amounted to about fifty million of bushels, while Milwaukie received about ten million. The exportation of grain from New Orleans to foreign countries had also fallen off year by year, till in 1860 the entire amount ex- ported was only 2,189 bushels of wheat, 224,382 bushels of corn, and rye, oats, and small grain to the value of $1,943, while during the years 1860-61 there were exported from New York 23,859,147 bushels of wheat, 9,268,729 bushels of corn, and 2,728,012 barrels of flour. To demonstrate still further the change in the grain trade from the southern to the northern route, the following table is appended, showing the exports of flour and grain from Cincinnati during the four years preceding the blockade of the Mississippi river, with the amount shipped by the southern and the amount shipped by the northern route Table P. Shipments north and south from Cincinnati for four years. Articles. 1857-'58. 1858-'59. 1859-'60. 1860-'61. Shipped south. Shipped north. Shipped south. Shipped north. Shipped south. Shipped north. Shipped south. Shipped north. Flour, barrels Wheat, bushels Corn, sacks 102,565 30, 446 1,927 445, 650 001,214 17,225 17, 569 1,182 3,707 544,570 270,531 24,796 92, 919 11,341 23,640 385, 389 310,154 35,227 158, 592 47, 801 105, 332 268, 033 477,234 21,947 It is also to be noted, that of the amount shipped south, as given in the above table, but a very small proportion reached New Orleans. For instance, in the year 1860, of the 478,308 barrels of flour exported from Cincinnati, only 35,146 barrels were shipped to New Orleans, the balance having been shipped north or to other ports on the river between Cairo and New Orleans. It is worthy of mention, however, that, although the export grain trade of New Orleans has not kept up with the production of the valley of the Mississippi, the local river trade greatly increased in consequence of the extraordinary demand by cotton and sugar planters, who were every year becoming more dependent upon the northwestern States for their suppUes of breadstuffs. THE GRAIN TRADE 0? THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI. The grain trade of the Upper Mississippi is a very important branch of northwestern commerce. The rapid development during the past five years of the resources of northern Iowa and Wisconsin, and of Minnesota, has built up large towns on the river, such as McGregor, Winona, Hastings, and St. Paul, on the Mississippi, and Stilhvater and Hudson, on the St. Croix, all of which are depots for the grain of the surrounding territory, which is shipped in steamboats and barges down the Missis^ sippi river to Lacrosse, Dunleith, and Fulton, where it is transferred to railroads and shipped to Lake Michigan ports. It is estimated that during 1863 the receipts of wheat alone, for the Upper Missis^ sippi river, at Lake Michigan ports, was not less than six millions of bushels THE GRAIN TRADE OF CALIFORNIA. One of the most wonderful features of the grain trade is its growth and development on the Pacific coast. Cahfornia, which but a few years since was entirely dependent upon western South American ports for a supply of breadstuffs, appears now on the records as a grain-exporting State, and almost every mail from the Pacific conveys intelligence of one or more ships, loaded with wheat, having sailed from San Francisco for Liverpool or London. Riches, other than gold, have been found on the soil, as the excellent quality and heavy yield of California wheat and other cereals, fully attest. INTRODUCTION. clix The following table shows the exports of flour and grain from the port of San Francisco to foreign countries from the year 1856 to 1861, inclusive: Table Q. Exports of grain and Jlour from San Francisco to foreign countries. (Compiled from official documents.) Year ending — WHEAT. FLOUR. KYE MEAL. KYE, OATS, ETC. Bushels. Dollars. Barrels. Dollars. ' Barrels. Dollars. Dollars. June 30,1856 33,088 35,932 6,564 9 948,220 2, 379, 617 36,748 64,683 12,272 11 449, 057 2, 550, 820 114,572 43, 122 6,683 22, 580 57, 820 186, 455 1,070,121 376, 837 84, 086 236, 568 380, 005 1,001,894 3,950 19,750 91,001 1857 35,839 335, 880 646, 581 339,902 316,299 1858 1859 I860 1861 1862 1863 . _... .... VINEYARDS AND WINE MAKING IN THE UNITED STATES. In the first settlements on this continent, the grape-vines found indigenous, were esteemed among the most valuable productions. In "Force's Collection of Historical Tracts" — 1620 to 1760— ^frequent allusion is made by the writers .to our native grapes and to the wine made from them. According to Sir John Hawkins, wine was made in Florida in 1564. A vineyard was established in Virginia in 1620, also in 1647. In 1651 premiums wei'e offered in Virginia for the production of wine. In 1664 a vineyard was planted near New York by Paul Richards, and in 1683 and 1685 attempts were made at iPhiliadelphia, but failed. At a later period Mr. Tasker, of Maryland, and Mr. Antil, of New Jersey, were more successful. These, however, were mere experiments. There is no evidence that wine was produced in any quantity worth naming, until the close of the last and the beginning of the present century. About this period vineyards were planted in various parts of the Union, near the cities of New York and Philadelphia; near Lexington and Glasgow, Kentucky; Cincinnati, Ohio; Vevay, Indiana; York and Harmony, Pennsylvania; Baltimore, Maryland; and in some parts of North and South Carolina, Georgia, and Virginia. These plantings were generally in small vineyards of one to five acres, and, unfortunately, most of them with foreign grapes, which, proving to be unsuited to our climate, resulted in failures. Those who planted with native grapes did better. In North and South Carolina the "Scuppemong wine," from a native grape, soon became famous, and was praised as a home production worthy of American patronage. At Vevay, Indiana, Dufour and his Swiss settlers adopted the "Schuylkill Muscadel," a Pennsyl- vania grape, then erroneously called the "Cape." This grape was found to suit the climate, and made a red wine, that soon acquired a fair reputation, and laid the foundation for wine-growing in the west, with the better varieties that succeeded it. The celebrated traveller, Volney, "tasted wine made from native grapes at Gallipolis, Ohio, in 1796," and Dufour, in 1799, "found a Frenchman at Marietta, Obio, who made a few barrels of wine every year from grapes collected in the woods, equal to the wine made near Paris." Dufour furtlicr remarks: "None of the different and numerous trials which were made in several parts of the United States that I visited in 1794, were found wjrthy the name of vineyards." "I went to see all the vines growing that I could hear of, even as far as Kaskaskia, on the Mississippi, where I was informed the Jesuits had planted a vineyard shortly after the first settlement of the country, but that the French government had ordered it to be destroyed, for fear that vine culture might spread in America and hurt the wine trade of France." "I found only the spot where that vineyard had been planted, in a well-selected place on the side of a hill, under a cliff to the northeast of the town. No good grapes were found there or in any gardens of the country." clx INTRODUCTION. Dr. Daniel Drake, iii an address on " The Early Physicians, Scenery, and Society of Cincinnati," states that " Third street, running near the brow of the upper plain, was on as high a level as Fifth street is now. The gravelly slope of that plain stretched almost to Pearl street. On this slope, be- tween Main and Walnut, a French Political exile, M. Mennesieur, planted, in the latter part of the last century, a small vineyard. This was the beginning of that cultivation for which the environs of that city have since become so distinguished. I suppose this was the first vineyard cultivation in the valley of the Ohio." The well-known naturalist, F. A. Michaux, in his travels through the United States in 1802, "visited the vineyard near Lexington and found but one variety of grape — a native, doing well, the foreign mildewed." The foregoing extracts afford a fair sample of the pioneer efforts in vineyard culture in the west ; they were much like those in the east, and wherever foreign vines were planted disappointment and loss resulted. In the south, owing to its genial climate, the experiments were more successful, but most so with native vines. In 1812 I was first cheered by the sight of a vineyard. It was on the south side of a hill at Rapp's German settlement of Harmony, in Butler county, Pennsyl- vania. The grapes planted were principally native varieties, the most of them " Schuylkill." Five years later I visited the vineyard of the Swiss colony, at Vevay, Indiana, where the same grape was the favorite. At the former the vines were planted in 1808, at the latter in 1806. The product was a red wine, resembling claret, but rather too harsh for the American palate. Still it was received with favor as a home production, giving promise of great results in the future. I now come to a period when the second class of pioneers in this cultivation were more fortunate than their predecessors, and, with other grapes, produced better wines. About the year 1820 Major John Adlura, of Georgetown, D. C, first brought the Catawba into notice as a wine grape, and Thomas McCall, of Georgia, Mr. Herbemont, and other gentlemen of the south, the Warren, Herbemont, Madeira^ and other varieties which have since proved so valuable. To Major Adlum belongs the honor of introducing the Catawba, and so high was his appreciation of this grape that he wrote to Mr. Longworth, of Cincinnati, that he believed he had conferred a greater favor on his country than if he had paid off the national debt ; in which, after a trial of the grape for wine, Mr. Longworth agreed with him. The memory of the late Nicholas Longworth, of Cincinnati, will ever be held in the highest esteem by the wine-growers of our country, as he was the father of successful vine culture in the west. By a large expenditure in money in his various experiments with both foreign and native grapes, during a period of forty-three years, he at last succeeded in producing sparkling and still wines highly creditable to himself and the country, and the practical knowledge he acquired from year to year was liberally made known through the public prints for the benefit of all. The late John J. Dufour, of Vevay, Indiana, is also entitled to the grateful remembrance of the people of the United States for his early and persevering efforts in the cultivation of the vine in this country of his adoption. For thirty years succeeding the introduction of the Catawba grape, the large emi- gration of Germans into the Ohio valley, many of them from the wine districts on the Rhine, furnished practiced and willing vine-dressers, who were glad to have the opportunity of trying their skill in this new country with a grape so promising. Numerous vineyards were planted in the western States, in localities supposed to be favorable, especially in the vicinity of Cincinnati, and in 1850 Catawba wine, produced in hundreds of thousands of gallons, had acquired a high reputation as a rival of Rhenish wine, and became an article of export to our eastern cities. The cultivation had spread over all the western and southwestern States, and we thought then, as we do now, that wine-grovv^ing would eventually be ranked amongst our most important agricultural interests. This the nex-t generation may possibly realize. Vineyard culture in the United States may now be considered as fairly established. Wine is made in thirty of the thirty-four States of the Union, of different quaUties of course, and with varied success. As to its future production in quantity, I should name, first, California ; second, the mountainous dis- tricts of the southern States, as most favorable on account of the climate ; third, the Ohio and Missis- sippi valleys ; fourth, the middle States ; and last, the eastern. As to quality, the best samples have INTRODUCTION. clxi been found in Georgia and the Ohio valley. The impression is, that in the middle, and eastern States the climate is too cold to elaborate sufficient saccharine matter in the grape to make a wine that will keep without the addition of sugar. But this may prove a mistake — new varieties may yet be produced to suit each section of our country where the grape is grown. They are now numbered by hundreds, and new hybrids are annually added to the lists. After all our experience during the last seventy years, vine culture in the United States is but yet in its infancy, and we have much to learn. The few millions of gallons which we produce annually, are as nothing when compared to the nine hun- dred millions of France, or the three thousand millions of all Europe. The vineyards of Europe are estimated at twelve millions of acres. We have far more grape territory than that in the United States;, but our climate, with the exception of California, is less equable. In California alone,it is stated, there are five millions of acres well adapted to grape culture. Here is something to reflect upon, and to give hope for the future. CULTIVATION. Vineyards are usually planted on hills, or rolling uplands; such positions are chosen on account of the natural drainage, which is considered essential. Porous soils are preferred to stiff clay, or such as are retentive of water. No trees should be permitted to grow within one hundred feet of the vine- yard, nor should any crop be cultivated in it, as the vine is a selfish plant, and demands all the ground lor its own use. The ground is prepared for planting by trenching with the spade two feet deep, or by breaking up with a subsoil and common plough 18 or 20 inches ; the latter is much the cheapest, and always adopted where the situation of the vineyard permits. In planting the vines, the distance apart in the rows appears to vary in different localities. Around Cincinnati and in the Ohio valley, 3 by 6 is the usual distance; on the shores of Lake Erie, 6 by 8, and 8 by 8; and in California, 8 by 10 is recommended as the proper distance. The object in this country, where labor is dear, is to cultivate with the, plough where it can be used, and to avoid the spade, which is expensive. Vineyard-planting is a system of dwarfing the vine, but with our long-jointed and rampant-growing native vines it may be an error to plant too close, or to prune too severely. Our European vine-dressers, accustomed to short- jointed vines, naturally fall into that error here, but they are now correcting it. The method of training also varies with localities. In the Ohio valley and the southerii States the single stake to each vine, and the bow system, is adopted. On the lake shore, and in California, the trellis is used, the vines being trained on it horizontally. The estimated average annual yield of good vineyards in the west is about that of France — 200 gallons to the acre. In the south they claim 500, and in California 800 ; these latter I consider too high. A bushel of grapes — fifty pounds — will make three and a half gallons of good wine, and a half gallon inferior. In a mere sketch like this article, it is only intended to impart general information on the subject of which it treats ; the reader is therefore referred for special directions as to setting out the vines, spring and summer prunings, cultivating the ground, and securing the crop, to the several treatises on grape-culture and wine-making recently published. But I may remark, in brief, that a free exposure to the wind, with the bunches of grapes sheltered from the hot sun by the leaves of the vine, tying neatly to the stake or trellis, a judicious shortening in of superfluous branches, and the keeping the ground cultivated and free from weeds, is considered essential. Disease, insects, and frost. — The grape, like other fruits, has its enemies. The most destructive of these is the mildew or rot. Was it not for this disease the Catawba would be immensely profitable; but of late years, in the Ohio valley, it has destroyed from one-fifth to four-fifths of the crop in many vineyards, and discouraged some persons from planting that fine grape. A sudden change of weather from hot to cold when the vine is in rapid growth, and the seed in the berries about hardening, is sure to produce rot. A free under-drainage — either natural or artificial — and a full exposure to the wind, will in part prevent it. No system of pruning or cultivation has yet proved a suflticient remedy in vitie- yards. Vines trained against the side of a house, and under cover of the eaves, seldom, if ever, rot. The disease probably results from atmosphoric causes, as the rust in wheat. 21 Glxii INTRODUCTION. Insects have not as yet been found very injurious, but the careful vlne-dresser will watch closely, and permit none to get colonized in his vineyard. The frost in some localities kills the young shoots of the vine in April, or early in May, but the twin or latent bud will put out, and yield about half a crop. To prevent serious injury by hail, let the bunches of grapes be well sheltered by the leaves of the vine, which will also prove a protection from the hot sun, VARIETIES OF GRAPES FOR THE VINEYARD. These are now quite numerous, and every year adds more to the list. It will only be necessary to name a few of the most popular varieties, and — 1. Catawba. — Nine-tenths of all our vineyards in the west and southwest are planted with this fine grape. With all its liability to rot, it continues a favorite. 2. Delaware. — This hardy and delicious table grape promises to rival the Catawba for wine. It is becoming popular with some of our best cultivators. The wine is light and delicate, and preferred to the Catawba by many good judges. The Delaware is less subject to rot than that variety. 3. Herhemont makes an excellent wine, but the vine is not hardy enough to be much planted. 4. Norton s Seedling. — A hardy, free-growing vine, but little affected by rot, makes a rich red wine like Burgundy, and is becoming quite popular. 5. Schuylkill. — This old favorite of sixty years ago is now but little planted. The wine resembles claret when well made, but the vine bears light crops. It is almost free from rot. 6. Isabella. — Another favorite of former years that is now but little cultivated for wine. It is deficient in saccharine matter to make still wine that will keep without adding sugar to the must or juice ; but the sparkling wine from it is delicious. The Concord, Hartford Prolific, and some of Rogers's hybrids, appear to suit our climate, and to be free from disease, but are not yet fairly tested for v?ine. Grapes of recent introduction in high credit for northern cultivation are the lona, and Adirondack, natives of the State of New York, and the Creveling, a native of Pennsylvania. In the south, in addition to the Catawba, the Warren is largely ctiltivated, and the So«.pp^rnong still holds the favorable reputation it acquired sixty years ago. Other varieties are being tested which it is unnecessary to enumerate here. The varieties in the vineyards of California are said to be foreign or of foreign origin. I have no means of describing or even naming them. WINE-MAKING. This process is as simple as making cider. The bunches of well-ripened, selected grapes, are mashed by passing through a pair of wooden rollers in a small grape-mill, or by a beetle in a barrel; then poured into the press and the juice extracted. This "must,"' as it is termed, is put into a clean cask to ferment. A few inches of space is left to allow room for fermentation, and a tin siphon is placed tight in the bung-hole, with one end in a bucket of water, through which the carbonic acid gas escapes, thus preventing a contact with the air from injuring the new wine. In ten days or two weeks the fermentation ceases ; then fill up the casks and drive the bungs tight. In March rack off the wine into clean casks. A second but slight fermentation will take place in May, when the bungs should be loosened until it subsides : then fill up the casks and tighten the bungs. The wine is now made, and in autumn will be fit to bottle. The only art in preserving the wine sound is to keep it free from the fir by filling up the casks and tightening the bungs every two or three weeks. So important is this, that in Europe they have a quaint proverb : "A man might as well forget to kiss his wife on coming home, as to leave a vacancy in his wine-cask," implying that the omission would turn both sour. Froni the refuse grapes, and the last pressing of the good ones, an inferior wine is made by the addition of sugar, and sold at half price. The lees of the wine and the pomace of the grapes are dis- tilled for brandy, which, in three or four years, compares favorably with foreign. The pride of the wine-grower is to make a good natural wine from the pure juice of the grape, without the artificial appliances of sugar or spirits. And, if this " must" or juice weighs over 80° (or 1.080) by the areometer or saccharine-scale, it will do so ; if not, then loaf sugar, dissolved in water, INTRODUCTION. clxiii must be added before fermentation. Catawba " must" averages 86°; Isabella, 72°. This is the product of the wine farmer who only makes " still wines." Sparkling wines are made by the wine merchant or vintner, who purchases the new wine before its second fermentation, fines and bottles it, and, by placing it in deep, arched sub-cellars, usually twenty-five feet under ground, and letting it remain there from fifteen to eighteen months, is enabled to prepare it for market, with the fermentating principle so subdued as not to endanger the bursting of the bottle. Sirup of rock-candy is added to sweeten it, and sometimes a spoonful of brandy to each bottle, to strengthen it. To make this wine right and profitably requires a large capital, and liberal outlays in preparation. This shovsry and popular wine sells for about double the price of still wines. The great art in making good wine is to have the grapes well ripened, and all unripe or imperfect berries picked from the bunch before pressing. The press, casks, and vessels should be perfectly clean. Then, with a good cellar, and the casks kept bung-full and tight, there is no danger. The grapes are not stemmed, the tannin in the stems being useful in clearing the wine. To the foregoing views of Mr. Buchanan, we add the following statement of ex-Governor Downey, of California, on the culture of the vine in that State : " In the tier of counties extending south from Santa Cruz to the Mexican boundary the grain crop is precarious, the seasons being uncertain, and the wheat subject to rust. Stock-raising and the culture of the vine are the chief employment of the husbandman. The number of vines now bearing in this State is about 4,500,000, and, if well attended, these will yield 4,500,000 gallons of wine; the capacity of our State for this product is beyond conception. The counties of Los Angeles and San Bernardino have now 2,000,000 vines; with increased supply of water for irrigation, they could be increased to 30,000,000. The grape generally cultivated, and as yet the best adapted, is that introduced by the Catholic missions. It is the same that is in general use in Spain, Madeira, and the Canary Islands, from which springs Xerez, or Sherry, and Madeira, or Teneriffe, altered somewhat by the change of climate and soil. There is less change in the process of wine making than in any other branch of modern agriculture, the same old process used hundreds of years since being yet followed by many, with as much advantage as by any modern innovation ; and it is as simple as by*'a cider-mill and press. Our vines, up to the present, are free from disease. The average yield of a well-attended vineyard is 1,000 gallons to the acre, and the vine will bear vigorously until it reaches sixty years of age. One hundred acres of vineyard can be planted, the ground prepared, and attended with as little cost as the same extent of land planted in tobacco: deep ploughing once or twice, harrowing, and laying off the rows six feet apart each way. The cuttings are about two feet long, planted with aid of a crow- bar, and from four to six inches left above the surface. The third year will produce, and at the age of six years, produce profitably. The first year we irrigate frequently, in order to assist the rooting of the vine, and thereafter once or twice annually, according to the soil or relative moisture.. I am induced to make these lengthy observations on the simplicity of vine culture from the fact that many are led to believe, from the dissertations and reports of agricultural societies, that the work of planting a vineyard on anything like a large scale must be a Herculean task. They suggest deep spading, (three feet,) and various composts, and a thousand and one fertilizers as adjuncts, which may, in their localities be necessary, but surely not in California, and it is very doubtful if they are in the vine region on the Atlantic side of the continent. Our process of irrigating is a never-failing source of fertility ; the salts and earthy matter held in partial solution in running streams, stimulate and enrich the _soil, and destroy, in a great measure, all insects and larvae. It is this natural irrigation of the valley qf the Nile that has made it yield its successive crops, from the remotest antiquity, without exhaustion. In this connexion, I would suggest to our farmers and gardners in the older States, that, when practicable, they should have one field at least that could be irrigated." clxiv INTRODUCTION INFLUENCE OF RAILROADS UPON AGRICULTURE, The first impression made on the popular mind by any great improvement in machinery or loco- motion, after the admission of their beneficial efiect, is that they will, in some way or other, diminish the demand for labor or for other machinery. Hence it was that in Europe the introduction of printing was denounced on account of its supposed tendency to diminish the employment of writers or copyists, and the associations of individuals against its employment, similar to the opposition subsequently mani- fested to the use of labor-saving machinery in manufactures. It was long before this prejudice could be overthrown, but the subject is now much better understood. It is now established, as a general principle, that machines facilitating labor increase the amount of labor required. This is done chiefly by cheapening the products of labor so that more can be consumed, and ultimately more labor employed. The introduction of cotton and wool, machinery was followed by outbreaks of workmen against ma- chinery ; yet nothing is more certain than that hundreds of thousands of men and women are employed in the manufacture of cotton who would not have been if machinery had not cheapened cotton cloth so that it could be introduced into general use. So it might be assumed that the introduction of sewing- machines would at once throw many sewing women out of employment ; but such is not the fact. Many more sewing women are now employed than there were before the sewing-machine was introduced. In the same way the influence of railroads was at first very much misconceived ; even among civil engineers the vast power of steam and of cohesion on the tracks were not understood. On the com- pletion of the Liverpool and Manchester railway, some of the ablest engineers laid it down as a settled principle that railroads would not be able to carry heavy freights, and their business must be confined to the carriage of passengers. It was also considered impracticable to ascend over fifty feet per mile with ordinary locomotives; as a consequence of this theory inclined planes were for several years made wherever the grade was over fifty feet. If this practice had continued, it must obviously have proved a great obstruction to thfe carriage of heavy freight. Time and inventive genius have happily overcome all these difficulties; but still, in this, as in other cases, there was an idea that the transportation of agricultural products would result in diminishing the number of horses, wagoners, and steamboats. In- deed, this would seem a natural, if not a necessary, effect of transporting immense quantities of agri- cultural produce by a machinery which did not before exist. The result, however, proves precisely the contrary. Horses have multiplied more rapidly since the introduction of locomotives than they did before ; and even steamboats, on such rivers as the Ohio and the Mississippi, where the recently con- structed railroads have been in direct competition with them, have continued to increase almost without interruption. Before we look at the general results of railroads on the agricultural interests, we will glance at their incidental connexion with the other means of transportation. Take, for example, the increase of horses in connexion with the increase of railroads. The following is the number and increase of horses in the last twenty years, including mules and asses : No. of horses. Increase. In 1840 4,335,669 In 1850 *4,896,050 12 per cent. In I860 *7,400,322 51 per cent. Three-fourths of all the miles of railroad have been made since 1850; and we see that since then the increase of horses has been the greatest. If we pursue this inquiry a little further, we shall find that horses, have increased the most in those States in which the greatest extent of railroads has been made since 1850. Take, for example, the number of horses employed in agriculture and for other purposes in the five great States of the west: « Exclusive of 1,185,514 not employed in agriculture. INTRODUCTION. clxv Number of horses employed, in agriculture and for otiicr purposes in the five great States of the west : States, 1850. 1860. Increase, per cent. Ohio 466, 820 320,898 278, 626 58,576 30,335 753, 881 592, 069 724, 138 167,999 145,584 61 84 160 186 380 1,155,255 2,383,671 106 In these five States there have been constructed since 1850 nearly nine thousand miles of railroad; and yet there we find this extraordinary increase in the number of horses. We do not present this as evidence that the construction of railroads necessarily augments the demand therefor, and therefore increases the number of horses, although w^e have no doubt that such is the case ; but simply to show^ that railroads have not diminished one of the great elements in competing means of transportation. It must be recollected that only forty years ago the only means of transporting goods and products between the eastern and western States was by wagons, and that the business of transportation in this way was as much a business, on relatively as large a scale, as that of transportation by canal and railway is now. The first great change in this mode of transportation was by the New York and Pennsylvania canal ; but the whole business of the canals in the first years of their introduction was small in comparison with that of the railroads now. Hence it seemed that railroads must diminish the number and importance of horses, but such was not the fact ; and we shall see in this, as in the case of all animals, that rail- roads tend to increase their number and value. This is now an established principle, which we shall illustrate in regard to other domestic animals. Although but slightly connected with the interests of agriculture, we may here state another fact, that since the introduction of railroads, the building and employment of stejmboats on our interior rivers have also increased largely, so tliat, even where railroads have competed iHrectly with them, the steamboat interest has continued to increase in value and importance. This has not been always, we admit, in direct proportion to the growth of the country, but enough to shoMcthat, even where competi- tion was greatest, this interest has not been injuriously affected. More than double the number of steamers were built on the waters of the interior west in 1861 than were in 1850. We advance these facts, not so much to show the direct and positive influence of railroads on agri- culture, as to show that there is no interest of agriculture and commerce that railroads have injured, even, when upon the most plausible theories, such results were anticipated. We now proceed to show the positive advantages which all departments of agriculture have derived from the construction of railroads. So great are their benefits that, if the entire cost of railroads between the Atlantic and western States had been levied on the farmers of the central west, their proprietors could have paid it and been immensely the gainers. This proposition will be- come evident if we look at the modes in which railroads have been beneficial, especially in the grain- growing States. These modes are, first, in doing what could not have been efiected without them ; second, in securing to tlie producer very nearly the prices of the Atlantic markets, which is greatly in advance of what could have been had on his form; and, third, by thus enabling the producer to dispose of his products at the best prices at all times, and to increase rapidly both the settlement and the annual production of the interior States. A moment's reference to the statistics of internal commerce will illustrate these effects so that wc can see the vast results which railroads have produced on the wealth and production of the country. 1. If we examine the routes and tonnage of the trade between the Atlantic cities and the central western States, we shall find some general results which will prove the utter incapacity of all other modes of conveyance to carry on that trade without the aid of railroads. Between Lake Erie on one clxvi INTRODUCTION. side and the Potomac on the other, the commerce between the east arid west is altogether carried on by way of several great arteries, which are these, viz: the Erie canal, the Oswego canal, theChamplain canal, the Central railroad, the Erie railroad, the Pennsylvania railroad, and the Baltimore and Ohio railroad. There are no other great channels of conveyance between the east and the west, and in fact no other routes appear practicable. However large an amount of product or merchandise may be carried by the lakes, it must be shipped to or from Buffalo, Oswego, or Ogdensburg. However multiplied may be the routes by rail or canal, by which products may arrive at Buffalo, Pittsburg, Wheeling, or Parkersburg, all the freights carried over them going east must pass over these great routes. We have, therefore, the means of determining accurately the relative transportation by different routes and modes. The different modes are all reduced to two — canals and railroads. The proportion of tonnage on these several lines of conveyance, as reported in 1862, was as follows: CANALS. Tons. Erie canal 2, 500, 7G2 Oswego canal. 852, 920 Champlain canal 650, 000 Aggregate 4, 003, 682 But, we must observe that the Oswego canal joins to the Erie canal, and its tonnage, arriving at or leaving Albany, is included in that of the Erie canal. In fact, the tonnage of the canals, which is courited at Albany, is only that of the Erie and the Champlain, and of the latter but a small portion goes to or from the west. We have at the utmost, then, the carriage on canals between the Atlantic cities and the west of 3,150,000 tons. RAILROADS. Tons in 1862. Pennsylvania railroad , 1, 792, 064 Erie railroad... . . . 1, 632, 955 New York CeDiral railroad 1, 387, 433 Baltimore and Ohio (estimated) 1, 200, 000 Aggregate tonnage of these lines 6, 018, 452 We observe that in 1862 the tonnage of the six great arterial lines of transportation between the east and west amounted to over nine millions of tons, of which only one-third were carried by water. We must recollect that this was the case when the Erie canal of New York had been enlarged and refitted with the express purpose of transporting the products of the west, and was supplied with five thousand canal^boats. It is evident, therefore, that railroads not only carry two-thirds of the freights to and from the west at the present time, but that such is the rapid increase of western pro- ducts, and the surplus carried to Atlantic or foreign markets, that the time is near when all that can be carried by water will be but a small proportion of the whole. The transportation by wagons is no longer possible to carry the surplus products of the interior States to either foreign or domestic markets. In fine, in the absence of railways the cultivation of grain beyond the immediate wants of the people must cease, or the surplus perish in the fields. Such was exactly the state of things in the west before the general introduction of railroads. The great grain-fields of Ohio, Indiana, lUinois, and beyond the Mississippi, have been mainly cultivated because railroads made their products marketable and profitable. In one word, railroads did what could not have been done without them. 2. Railroads secured to the producer very nearly the prices of the Atlantic markets, which was greatly in advance of any price which could possibly be obtained in western markets. It might be supposed that if the carriage of a bushel of grain from Sandusky to New York was reduced from forty cents a bushel to twenty cents, ihe gain of twenty cents would inure, in part at least, to the consumer; but experience shows this is not the fact. This gain of twenty cents inures to the producer. In proof INTRODUCTION. clxvii of this it will be sufficient to adduce two or three well-known facts. The prices of flour and meat at New York (estimating them at the gold standard) have not been reduced in the least, notwithstanding the immense quantities of the products of grain imported into that city. On the other hand, the prices at Cincinnati, on the Ohio, have doubled, and in some articles, such as pork, have trebled. The great bulk of the gain caused by the cheapness of transportation has gone to the producer. This depends on a general principle, which must continue to operate for many years. The older a country is, the more civic and the less rural it becomes ; that is, the greater will be the demand for food, and the less the production. The competition of the consumer for food is greater than that of the producer for price. Hence it is that Europe, an old country, filled with cities, makes a continual demand on this country for food. Hence it is that New^ England and New York, continually filling up with manu- facturers, artisans, and cities, must be supplied with increased quantities of food from the interior west ; and hence, while this is the case, prices cannot fall in the great markets. Hence it is that the cheapening of transportation inures to the benefit of the agricultural producer. New England consumes more than a million barrels of western flour. The transportation is cheapened a dollar per barrel . and thus, in New England alone, in the single item of flour, a million of dollars, net profit, is put into the pockets of the western farmer by the competition of railroads ; for a large portion of this flour is carried over the Massachusetts Western railroad. It is entirely true that the manufacturer of New England shares, on his side, in the gain of cheap transportation ; but we are here considering simply the influence of railroads on agriculture. In the western markets the gain to the farmer is palpable in the enhanced prices of every article. At Cincinnati, in 1848 and 1849, (which was the beginning of the greatest railroad enterprises,) the average price of hogs was $3 per hundred. In 18G0 and 1861 it was double that, and has continued to increase. This was a net gain to the farmers of Ohio alone of from three to four millions of dollars. In the entire west it was a profit of more than twenty millions on this single animal ; for, if there were now no railroads, this product could not be carried to market except on foot, which would take away half the value. No further illustration of this point need be made. Take the market prices of New York and Boston, on the Atlantic, and of St. Louis and Cincinnati, in the west, at an interval of twenty years, and it will be seen that the cheap prices of the west have gradually approximated to the high prices of the east, and this solely in consequence of cheapening the cost of transportation, which inures to the benefit of the farmer. 3. By thus giving the farmer the benefit of the best markets and the highest prices, railroads have increased the agricultural productions of the interior States beyond anything heretofore known in the world. We have already shown that this increased production, or rather its surplus, could not have been carried to market without the aid of railroads, more than two-thirds of the whole being carried off by that means. Let us now reverse this operation, and we find, on the other hand, that railroads have stimulated and increased production. The northwestern States are those in -NVliich the influence of railroads on agriculture is most obvious. In the five States of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin there were comparatively few miles of railroad prior to 1850; but fronl 1850 to 1860 the construction of roads was most rapid. In 1850 there were only 1,275 miles of railroad in those States, but in 1860 there were 9,616 miles. Let us now examine the products of those States in 1850 and 1860, and see how the progress of railroads has sustained and stimulated agricultural production. The following table shows the increase of the principal vegetable a;nd animal production in the five States of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin in the ten years fro ni 1850 to 1860: In 1850. In 1860. Inci'easG per cent. Wheat 39, 348, 495 bushels. 79, 798, 163 bushels. 100 Corn 177, 3S0, 441 " ' 280,268,862 " 68 Oats 32,660,251 " 51,043,334 " 50 Potatoes -. 13,417,896 " 27,181,692 " 100 Cattle - 3,438,000 >' 5,371,000 /' 59. ckviii INTRODUCTION. This increase is decidedly beyond that of the population ; showing that the products of agriculture are, in those States, profitable. The aggregate of grain products in those States was : In 1850 - •255, 240, 444 bushels. In 1860 •422, 369, 719 " AVhat part railroads have had in carrying this product to market we shall see byf ascertaining the surplus, and the manner in which it was transported. The commissioner of statistics for the State of Ohio, in his report to the legislature of Ohio, estimates (in the actual carriage of railroads and canals) that three-fifths of the value of agricultural products of Ohio are exported, excepting, of course, pas- turage, fruits, garden products, &c. In 1859-60, twelve millions of bushels of wheat were exported from that State, and an equal proportion of corn, reduced into other forms, such as fat cattle, hogs, pork, lard, whiskey, cheese, &c. Three-fifths of the aggregate grain production of these five States (1860) will give two hundred and fifty millions of bushels of grain. This is vastly greater than the whole tonnage of canals and railroads, and would, therefore, seem incorrect. This, however, is not so. The heaviest article (corn) is reduced to a fourth, perhaps, less weight by being changed into whiskey, pork, and cattle. The same is true of oats, and thus the ten millions of tons represented by the canals and rail- roads may cover all the surplus which finds the extreme eastern markets. A large quantity of the surplus products of these States is consumed in way-markets. We see now, that, since railroads carry two-thirds of this immense export, they represent nearly or quite the same proportion of the capacity of those States to raise any surplus, and therefore two-thirds of the profit made upon it. If we now consider the question of the profits of agriculture, the case becomes still stronger. The actual cash value of the products carried to market from these five States (that is, the surplus) is two hundred millions of dollars, and it is safe to say that one-half this sum is due to the influence of railroads. There are some interesting facts on this subject, to some of which we will briefly allude. Take, for example, the prices of both products and lands in the interior States, and compare them at diflerent periods. Forty years ago (1824-25) the surplus products of Ohio had already accumulated beyond the means of transportation. In consequence of this fact, wheat was sold in the interior counties, for 37 cents per bushel, and corn at 10 cents. After the New York canal (Erie) was finished, in 1825, and the Ohio canals several years later, these prices were raised more than fiity per cent. ; but when two or three of the main railroad lines were finished in 1852-53, the rise in prices and the amount carried forward to the eastern markets were even more increased. To show, in some measure, the efiect of the improved means of transportation on the value of produce in the interior, we make the following table of prices at Cincinnati at several periods : In 1826.t In 1835. In 1853. In 1860. Flour $3 00 per barrel. $6 00 $5 50 $5 60 Corn ]2per bushel. 32 37 48 Hogs 2 OOpercwt. 3 12 4 00 6 20 Lard 05 per pound. 08 08J 11 We find that in 1860 the price of flour was nearly double that of 1826 ; the price of corn nearly four times as much ; the price of hogs three times as much, and the price of lard double. From 1835 to 1860, (when the railroads were completed,) under the influence of railroad competition with canals the price of corn advanced 50 per cent., and that of hogs 100 per cent. Perhaps no articles can be selected which furnish a more complete test of the value and profits of farming in the States of the northwest than that of these staples, corn and hogs. But there is another respect in which the influence of railroads is almost as favorable to agricul- ture as that of cheapening the transportation of produce. It is that of cheapening the transportation, and therefore reducing the prices of foreign articles afid eastern manufactures consumed by the farmers of the interior. We need not adduce tables to illustrate this ; for it is quite obvious and well known *Includi!S wheatr.rye, corn, o.its, barley, and buckwheat. i Edward D. Mansfield, t The prices of 182G are from " Drake & Mansfield's Cincinnati, 1826." INTRODUCTION. ckix that thi-s has been the effect, though perhaps not to so great an extent as the reverse, in the ease of produce. In 1839-40 sugar was just the same price as in 1857 and 1858 ; but the average price of coffee from 1833 to 1838 was three cents higher than it was from 1853 to 1860. On the whole, the prices of articles carried from the east to the west were diminished, while those from the west to the east were increased. Again, the influence of railroads on the value of farming lands is too great and striking not to have been noticed by all intelligent persons. We have, however, some remarkable instances of the specific effect of certain railroads ; we have, for example, the immediate effect produced on the lands of Illinois by the Illinois Central railroad. That company received from the government a large body of land at a time when the government could not sell it at a dollar and a quarter ($1 25) per acre. Since then the company has constructed its road and sold a large part of those lands at an average of $11 per acre, and the greater part of the lands of Illinois is fully worth that. Notwithstanding the rapid growth of population, the larger part of this advance is due to rail- roads. The following table shows the ad'vance (by the census tables) of the cash value of farms in the five States mentioned in the ten years from 1850 to 1860 : 1850. 1860. Ohio $358, 758, 602 $666, 664, 171 Illinois 96, 133, 290 432, 531. 072 Indiana 136, 385, 173 344, 902, 776 Michigan 51,872,446 163,279,087 Wisconsin 28,528,563 131, 117,082 Aggregate 671, 678, 075 1, 738, 394, 188 Increase in ten (10) years. . , $1, 066, 716, 113 It is not too much to say that one-half this increase has been caused by railroads, for we expe- rience already the impossibility of conveying off the surplus products of the interior with our railroads. Putting the increase of value due to railroads at a little more than one-third, w6 have four hundred miUions of dollars added to the cash value of farms in these five States by the construction of railroads. This fact will be manifest if it is considered that the best lands of Illinois were worth but a dollar and a quarter per acre prior to the construction of railroads, and are now worth twenty dollars. We need not pursue this subject further. If the effect on the central western States has been so great, it is still greater in the new States which lie beyond the Mississippi. They are still fiirther from market, and will be enriched in a greater ratio by the facilities of transportation. Indeed, railroads are the only means by which the distant parts of this country could have been commercially united, and thus the railroad has become a mighty means of Wealth, Unity, and Stability. PRESERVATION OF FOREST TREES. We have endeavored to avail ourselves of all proper occasions, to impress upon our generation the importance of exercising greater care in the preservation of forest trees. It is lamentable, in view of present ruthlessness, and the demands of posterity, to observe the utter disregard manifested by the American people, not merely for the preservation of extensive groves, but the indifference which they exhibit for valuable trees, the destruction of which is not necessary to good cultivation, and the existence whereof would not only add greatly to the value of their property, but contribute vastly to health, the fertility of their farms, and the comfort of their live stock. We" have seen thousands of farms rendered less productive and of much less intrinsic value by the destruction of timber, especially on their north and west boundaries, where they protect from the coJds of winter, and others made unhealthy by removing the barriers which nature had placed to the encroachments of miasm. We remember, upon an occasion of remonstrance with a farmer against destroying a beautiful isolated tree in a large field, his foolish reply in extenuation of his labor, that it supplied a resort for the blackbirds which destrdyed his corn, nor could he be persuaded that its use by the birds which 22 clxx INTRODUCTION. protected his fields through a long series of years from insect depredators, much more than compensated for the few corn-hills torn up by the enemy of the grub-worm, nor dissuaded by the representation of its benefits in supplying shade to his cattle. His plea was, that if we had experienced like labor with himself in eradicating the original forest, we would not manifest such fondness for trees. Were the half of that farm now possessed of so much of its "original forest" as might have been preserved, without any restriction of its uses for necessary purposes, it would be worth double the present value of his entire estate, while we doubt not that the other half would have yielded more income than he has derived from the whole, and have increased in value. No one better understood the importance of belts of timber as protection against the inroads of fever, than the judicious and philosophic Dr. Benjamin Rush, of Philadelphia, who in 1798 assigns one cause for "the unusually sickly character of Philadelphia after the year 1778" to the "meadows being overflowed to the southward of the city, and the cutting down by the British army of the trees which formerly sheltered the city from the exha- lations of the ground."* "^ Dr. Rush refers to the fact of residences in the southern country becoming untenable from like causes — the cutting down of groves near dwellings. Through ignorance and want of taste, labor and expense are thus misappropriated, producing injurious consequences, not only to the present but to future generations. Every well-managed farm should support sufficient timber to admit of an abundant present supply for all necessary purposes of fuel, fencing and building, without reducing the quantity necessary for like uses by posterity, and by the exercise of discretion the amount of land appropriated to this end will be found less than is generally supposed, although, judging from the too general practice, it would appear as if we presumed that posterity would have but little use for timber. Apart from the increasing value of timber in every section of our country, our farmers do not seem to comprehend that they are destroying that which in a little time would prove the most attractive feature of their estates. Groves restrain the sweeping winds in winter from divesting the surface of that soft and protecting covering and important fertihzer, the snow, the gradual melting of which in spring converts the stones into food for plants, while in the summer they supply an invisible but important moisture to the crops, and in the heated day enable them to enjoy the full advantage of the dews of night, and supply agree- able places of recreation for developing the intellects and bodies of our children, ever associating with their minds through life, recollections of pleasures the happiest of their existence, which made home a place of joyous contentment. And who that has experienced the pleasure, would ex&hange it for that derivable from other examples of practical operations, the gratification yielded by mature, beautiful forest trees which he preserved, protected, and pruned when they were but unseemly shrubs, especially when his children and their children derive from them their happiest annual enjoyments 1 He whose farm is destitute of groves should procure or plant them at once, being encouraged by the fact that from the seed, with good attention, he may have nut-bearing chestnut trees in eight years ; and while your houses and barns are failing, these will be improving. But in addition to the luxury, ornament, and value of groves, wherever they are cherished with proper attention, they confer a dignity upon their possessor and ennoble the pursuit of agriculture. That was a sage injunction of the dying Scotch laird to his son: "Jock, when ye hae naething else to do, ye may be aye sticking in a tree; it will be growing, Jock, when y're sleeping;" words of wisdom " tauld" him by his father, " sae forty years, sin ;" but which he regretfully confessed not to have heeded. "While treating of this subject we cannot refrain from reference to that bad taste, so frequently exhibited, of introducing exotics for ornament, or to supply shade, to the neglect of the beautiful native forest trees, which are so easy to be obtained by all — not that we have any objection to such, under appropriate circumstances, but to adopt them to the exclusion of the more attractive and useful trees with which our forests abound, betrays a want of taste as well as deficiency in judgment. ' Medical Inquiries and Observations : Philadelphia, 1789, p. 86. INTRODUCTION clxxi *FRUITS, VEGETABLES, AND WOOL OF CALIFORNIA. Our orange and lemon crops are becoming of great importance, coming into market or ripening when those raised in the tropics are exhausted. The trees of each of these grow as large as they do in the tropics; the fruit is as good and as sweet, but the rind thicker. We produce the sugar-cane of Louisiana, and it yields profitably ; the Chinese sugar-cane does well, but neither these nor the cotton- plant have been cultivated on sufficiently large a scale to enable me to arrive at a conclusion as to their real merits as staple products in this region. A convention of stock-raisers, composed of intelligent gentlemen, met in San Francisco last year. They inform us, from their best source of information, that we have now in the State three millions of horned cattle, a number far beyond the wants of con- sumption ; and there being no market open to us beyond the limits of the State, this branch of industry has become profitless and ruinous. The same will apply to horses. We have vast quantities of inferior stock which have become a nuisance, and which only serve to destroy pasture that might be profitably employed for the maintenance of the Merino sheep. The capacity of this State for maintaining a large population in proportion to our entire superfice, is not as great as our number of square miles would suggest. There is but a comparative small proportion that can be cultivated. This is not owing to any want of fertility, but to the absence of rains in the summer, and the scarcity of water for irrigation on a large scale. Our commercial position on the con- tinent, our vast mineral resources, and our unsurpassed climate will always guarantee to California a respectably numerous, but we need never hope for a dense population, such as will swarm the great northwest, " where every rood of land will maintain its man." Much will be done to extend the present area of cultivation in the State by means of artesian water, damming in the winter to prison the water of mountain streams for summer irrigation, and by improved modes of deep ploughing and subsoiling, which will enable the field to absorb and retain the winter rains. Vegetables of all kinds are produced in great abundance, and the aid of manures is seldom resorted to. In size and yield they surpass those of the older States, but some contend they are deficient in flavor. This, I think, a mistake, and may be partially accounted for by early and pleasing impressions of home. Our wool clip will claim, in order of importance, the second rank as a product, adding largely to the material wealth of the State and nation at large, giving to large numbers pleasing and profitable employment, and adding much to our carrying trade. From a few thousand coarse- wooled and inferior Mexican sheep, our flocks will now number three millions of improved stock, yielding this year a clip approximating to 12,000,000 pounds ; and, at the close of the present decade, it will not be unreasonable to expect that California will produce an amount equal to the entire product of this staple in the United States in 1860 — say 60,000,000 pounds. We are happy to see that your wise and patriotic suggestions in relation to the protection that our wool-growing interests should have and receive are being acted on by Congress. The same rule should apply to the wine-growing interest, and specific, not ad valorem, duties should be the rule, so as to prevent fraud both on the producer and the government. * Communicated by Kx-Govemor Downey. clxxii INTRODUCTION. NUMBER OF SLAVEHOLDERS IN THE UNITED STATES. The last table in the volume would attach more properly to that on population ; but, not having been included there, it is deemed more advisable to incorporate it here than to omit it. In examining this table, the conclusion must not be arrived at that the exhibit presents the number of people directly interested in slaves. A great majority of the persons represented in the table are heads of families, or agents for others having equal interest with themselves. It would probably be a safe rule to consider the number of slaveholders to represent the number of families directly interested in the slave population in 1860. In concluding this introduction, we cannot but allude to the industry and capacity of Mr. James S. Wilson, who has been charged with the supervision of the tables follovdng, and to whom we are mainly indebted for that accuracy with which they have been prepared. AGRICULTURE YEAE ENDING JUNE 1, 1860. STATE OF ALABAMA. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. ACRES OP LAND. g a I at p. h .1 I .g " y P4 LIVE STOCK. I 10 II 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 SO 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 5S Autauga ... Baldwin Barbour Bibb Blount , Butler , CalTiouu ChamberB . . , Cherokee Choctaw Clarke Coffee Conecuh Coosa Covington... Dale Dallas DeKalb Fayette Franklin Greene Henry Jacki^on Jefferson Lawrence . . . Lauderdale . . Limestone . . . Lowndes Madison Marengo Marion Marshall Macon Mobile Montgomery. Monroe Morgan Perry Pickens Pike Randolph Kussell Shelby St. Clair Sumter Tallapoosa ... Talladega Tuscaloosa . . . Walker "Washington . . Wilcox Winston Total. 131, 738 10, 141 209, 150 74, 705 40, 943 99,959 125, 306 226, 163 106, 919 92, 272 99, 429 56, 612 73, 845 123,231 S9, 275 76,726 261, 130 56, 218 56, 768 133, 575 277, 462 101, 993 104, 860 75, 121 142, 726 139, 446 120, 047 239, 667 814, 509 244,821 38, 912 56, 400 224, 419 10, 399 257, 602 98, 408 82, 412 194, 562 174, 131 167, 085 100, 323 230, 121 72, 154 60, 400 189, 014 153, 332 139, 892 151, 420 31, 467 16, 987 179, 143 12,329 6,385,724 307, 385 73, 045 324, 653 230. 542 152, 087 306, 628 246, 619 S06, 279 218, 234 258, 903 446, 169 213, 181 173, 682 316, 376 142, 651 373, 651 286, 343 99, 314 328, 739 280. 543 282, 682 S66, 582 228, 583 216, 547 201, 467 287, 234 147, 139 273, 238 192, 734 334, 102 333, 869 124, 199 221, 073 130, 400 295, 511 253, 367 158, 641 227, 089 328, 873 354, 828 333, 502 214, 407 193, 588 237,725 208, 798 301,859 310, 014 469, 085 198, 567 107, 552 337, 886 72, 663 12, 718, 821 $2, 901, 285 468, 090 4, 960, 812 1, 443, 455 832, 500 2, 950, 744 2, 709, 394 3, 035, 933 2, 979, 265 , 2, 746, 506 3, 255, 548 1, 004, 062 1, 045, 700 1, 672, 376 538, 155 1, 431, 122 9, 311, 714 1, 100, 609 739, 641 4, 096, 733 9, 176, 802 2, 154, 860 3, 121, 085 1, 219, 865 2, 996, S8S 4, 554, 063 3, 593, 495 9, 040, 470 6, 078, 806 10, 291, 863 729, 765 1, 373, 766 5, 825, 099 1, 186, 763 9, 883, 964 2, 678, 000 1, 441, 974 7, 275, 412 4, 016, 618 3, 744, 687 1, 9S0, 170 4, 959, 649 1, 401, 230 1, 370, 662 5, 308, 979 3, 256, 377 3,111,205 5, 925, 157 613, 820 791, 710 7,311,117 231, 261 175,824,622 $125, 234 20,495 181, 331 113, 385 54, 835 101, 433 150, 088 210, 501 166, 508 112,246 143, 381 41,228 73, 492 146, 061 39, 266 83, 868 245,541 74,053 96, 246 140,228 259, 471 99, 118 98,255 95, 261 91, 730 154, 512 114, 539 405, 489 184, 2rr 301, 473 85, 834 71,393 153, 394 40, 758 326, 229 144, 549 77,076 276, 479 263, 403 165, 763 105, 930 208, 958 82,123 75, 371 248, 997 198, 836 184, 704 260, 551 57,797 23,980 233, 165 21, 184 7, 433, 178 1,885 499 2,861 2,267 1,655 2,123 3,139 3,046 3,171 1,925 2,115 1,264 1,183 3,950 1,035 1,828 3,876 2,664 2,356 3,413 2,834 1,718 4,663 2,409 2,877 3,076 2,961 3,372 4,283 2,870 2,408 2,270 2,609 962 3,255 1,870 3,040 2,327 3,392 3,316 3,688 2,141 2 037 2,319 2,364 3,210 3,025 3,557 1,468 685 2,308 604 127, 063 2,279 587 3,521 1,092 412 1,566 1,975 2,915 1,488 1,657 1,940 528 800 1,798 864 850 5,809 617 607 2,088 5,580 1,254 1.007 T7C54- 2,020 2,223 1,830 4,791 4,680 5,522 562 815 4,170 606 5,613 1,777 1,069 4,463 3,122 3,561 1,177 3,814 1,013 623 3,945 2,189 2,359 3,958 327 507 4,302 76 111, 687 4,575 4,381 6,024 4,103 2,186 4,518 5,324 6,073 4,623 3,929 5,485 4,435 4,470 6,111 3,117 4,850 5,043 3,504 3,617 4,333 5,909 4,561 4,941 3,197 3,773 3,011 5,417 4,351 5,127 3,653 3,377 5,502 4,040 5,514 4,648 3,028 4,749 6,581 6,367 5,391 5,395 3,406 3,520 3,630 3,857 5,763 7,046 2,367 3,090 5,011 882 230, 537 1,081 400 1,289 585 1,317 1,736 2,393 2,304 2,090 1,992 1,816 210 1,143 2,173 1,088 1,-628 1,379 1,740 1,755 1,960 2,708 1,384 2,639 1,821 1,341 1,578 1,574 1,907 2,014 2,816 1,835 1,616 1,869 825 2,048 1,583 1,059 1,535 2,365 2,508 2,793 1,637 1,341 1,789 2,269 2,702 1,449 3,069 1,435 409 1,843 88, 316 8,147 10, 360 18, 839 7,635 3,956 10,208 8,525 8,252 7,293 8,737 13, 416 9,294 10, 135 11, 239 5,872 6,731 9,972 6,195 6,331 8,089 12,284 7,367 10,286 6^230 4,709 5,225 4,486 13, 086 7,673 14, 571 5,738 4,517 11, 840 8,238 13, 719 8,054 5,945 10, 484 8,103 11, 785 7,690 16, 631 6,894 5,523 9,953 9,162 10, 061 12,427 2,971 11, 597 13,569 1,599 454, 543 5,634 3,0 6, .331 8, •923 4,C 7,101 8,609 7,764 11, 106 6,192 5,305 3,685 5,612 6,258 *,'■ 7,872 9,028 7,497 9,849 10,503 14, 675 4,310 10, 919 5,965 6,409 10, 007 7 890 6,789 9, 015 10, 085 5,803 5,119 5,821 5,124 10, 376 4,759 6,508 8,736 9,969 5,682 8,973 4,108 4,961 5,291 10, 243 8,244 7,635 10, 990 4,290 1,796 8,220 1,339 \ 370, 156 STATE OF ALABAMA. AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PKODUCED. •s > •s ■s 1 i 1 ■■a a 1 .o 1 o a 1 P« 1 s 1 o H ■3 A a "> S ^ •s 1 o a ■-r 1 •3 4 h ■a » i S ■3 5 ■s to u 1 27,483 -$778,906 10,105 2,795 559,521 7,034 23,282 1,052 17,329 12,289 60, 608 6,872 126, 930 1 8,864 294,470 28 110 131, 167 6,802 390 2,178 7,244 2,261 1,656 33, 979 2 55,583 1,225,193 6,001 1,585 909,973 15,727 41, 875 205 44,518 11, 426 84, 741 4,705 273, 8S1 3 42, 158 608,458 15, 393 745 411,130 7,143 335 2,475 8,303 12,262 40, 368 4,854 86, 879 4 ^ 15,949 305,025 35,286 305 294,702 7,184 90 21, 990 1,071 7,454 13, 505 6,978 39, 951 5 34,116 746, 735 1,104 394 476, 301 5,634 4,210 345 13,489 11,449 26,291 579 124,391 6 36, 508 812,766 103,434 652 655, 193 28,049 400 4,785 11,573 15, 031 16, 508 6,311 90,850 7 46, 374 1,132,376 78,861 2,143 793, 466 44,855 1,065 70 24,589 10, 849 25,538 12,022 176, 771 8 32, 620 739, 631 91,037 921 604, 217 32,378 320 23,399 10, 562 17, 127 20, 146 9,665 79,823 9 29,194 678,377 442 975 445, 285 2,759 7,181 70 17, 252 6,950 24,878 6,167 102, 807 10 '37, 966 808,820 70 714 516,355 2,045 10, 195 15,760 16,.285 13, 390 18,891 5,390 151,223 11 23,859 392,032 533 70 257, 822 2,508 1,721 229 5,294 3,292 33, 141 892 78,357 12 21, 996 458, 986 823 685 302, 610 3,508 15, 597 3,280 6,850 10, 118 14, 125 2,222 72,370 13 35,810 909,070 32, 079 1,105 552, 928 19, 189 9,985 1,852 13, 990 11, 794 60, 066 16,221 158,293 14 20,527 324,362 350 229 148, 475 1,173 19,849 1,431 2,021 9,282 7,761 261 55, 459 15 34, OH 550,691 1,278 650 341, 239 9,614 36,201 2,206 7,836 12, 613 8,938 1,839 109, 129 16 55,145 1,716,129 ?,880 2,617 1,352,961 10, 496 21, 673 2,027 63,4J0 ^ 19, 110 38,753 8,564 185, 919 17 23,772 496, 116 49, 436 869 451, 081 20,821 50 26, 664 1,498 15,747 7,990 11,267 49, 034 18 21,963 501,713 29,483 292 338, 552 1,090 222 4,151 5,462 18, 604 28, 689 8,829 64, 103 19 31, 861 838, 487 21,763 3,774 764, 967 16,074 400 6,801 15,592 21, 896 18, 100 14,000 52,071 20 49,701 '1,746,454 22,033 2,725 1,311,535 17, 743 180 20 57, 858 t-' 27,568 60, 613 11,218 194, 469 21 33,938 621, 480 1,790 1,350 421, 618 4,241 9,031 270 13, 034 7,082 58, 930 3,224 138,025 88 27,463 837,307 26,458 788 1, 050, 716_ 586, 785 8,510 2,787, 13, 301 10, 207 9,192 247 2,713 4,940 20,323 12, 267 14, 730 47, 085 23 23,561 552, 095 51,032 267 12, 691 26, 405 7,163 52, 995 24 23,919 768,543 17, 817 4,104 3,328 659, 666 '*' 15,434 11, 050 i- 12,507 16,783 9,515 29, 967 85 24,101 845, 171 38,751 646, 603 30, 569 80 3,525 ^ - 17, 354 15, 362 14, 026 36,252 26 30,958 718, 902 20, 317 4,023 585, 785 9,555 25 4,372 15, 115. L 13, 311 8, 458 . 10, 133 26, 454 27 56,394 1,661,362 9,096 1,563 1,288,722 45,122 16, 743 28 53, 664 ,t^ 16,327 24, 767 13,453 174, 632 28 49,723 1, 107, 685 43,613 7,746 988,396" 44,587 260 6,711 22, 119 16, 725 33, 595 21, 127 69, 687 29 58,457 1, 699, 142 4,495 1,583 1, 384, 616 13, 970 31,689 200 62,-428, t— 22,929 82,945 6,014 208,836 30 20,272 493,607 25,224 1,196 359, 018 1,955 2,070 12, 960 4,285 13, 520 27, 602 4,997 53, 574 31 27,035 518,027 20,429 859 462, 446 6,780 120 3,775 4,931 10,819 6,155 9,040 43, 281 32 44,775 1,2^1,568 23,728 1,679 972, 723 27, 264 6,355 60 41, 119 I' 5, 552 82, 861 11, 895 241, 610 33 10, 441 389, 430 70, 412 1,586,480 2,325 33, 476 58,439 5,054 30 440 8,671 4,755 15, 132 10, 881 34 63, 134 1,748,273 6,317 1,262 476 58, 880 18,448 32,206 11,839 23,394 35 30,661 673,257 277 400 496, 455 818 8,111 40 18, 826 l-^ 9,190 23,226 3,556 118, 017 36 25,628 546, 110 16,240 1,422 447, 851 6,885 1,440 7,145 6,386 13, 695 14, 892 9,930 36,686 37 41, 767 1, 305, 872 12,540 1,012 1, 074, 257 16,239 8,580 605 44, 603 .. 17,184 rf»TB,314 4,458 179, 145 38 . 48, 289 1, 229, 332 1,133,938 36, 907 1,275 884,229 1,283 89, 843 16, 594 41, 970 4,593 166, 204 39 55,156 3,153 960 823,752 13,199 25, 150 185 24,527 8,730 79,493 4,143 843, 079 40 37, 596 679, 785 63, 080 759 560, 133 24,973 3,031 18,391 6,427 16, 671 24, 054 7,183 114, 803 41 37,877 964, 095 18, 911 660 776, 955 22,087 4,140 1,275 38,728 t-' 7,510 69, 361 8,417 287,303 42 23,785 442,289 37, 448 1,283 378, 660 11, 854 300 2,574 6,463 8,258 15, 142 10, 742 56,913 43 22,887 306, 026 38, 660 461 371,527 4,294 6 9,821 4,189 9,757 7,080 5,544 45,924 44 42,303 41, 684 1,181,240 983, 087 8,802 59,031 1,944 996, 490 10, 469 10,835 1,460 36,584 -<-- 20,215 48, 699 10, 398 122, 559 4S 563 635,220 492 2,844 17, 3"99 14,889 46, 465 4,724 125, 144 46 38,832 929,590 81,559 2,465 755, 173 64,082 62 2,578 18,243 > 12,660 27,068 11,973 89, 954 47 37, 289 1,716,130 25,458 3,019 859, 928 24,480 36, 899 1,941 26, 035 ;-■• 19,076 43, 965 12,775 150, 271 48 17,325 292, 831 12,085 695 249,274 1,051 74 6,631 2,766 7,889 16,493 2,447 36,415 49 15, 314 46,326 6,031 295,576 132, 745 3,449 2,020 770 42, 033 SO 1,303,368 111,796 3,278 3,529 727 1, Oil, 359 88,808 9,681 483 71, 534 687 48,749 352 *■ 16, 249 20, 088 7,954 9,378 206, 108 51 709 7,629 2,836 3,385 15, 090 52 1,748,321 43,411,711 1,218,444 72, 457 33,226,282 682,179 493, 46S 232, 914 989,955 775,117 1,482,036 491,646 5,439,917 STATE OF ALABAMA. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. m ■i n 1 r n f "1 O 1 1 13 I! ■ss" t u 1 i 1 1 5 o s 1 1 Autauga 846 246 $16,598 3,929 6,055 8,933 3,835 875 130 16,805 1,031 5,658 70 1,114 104 705 11 $8,620 11,330 1,915 12 100 109,239 20,394 121,935 79,328 102, 490 92,543 187,012 223,590 153, 196 59,989 67,529 38,995 46, 181 122,494 34, 111 59,068 136,636 91,637 128,779 169,851 151, 520 65, 644 141,914 147,447 85,948 102,881 93,503 126,526 170, 114 162,827 168,302 99,032 155,232 12, 064 163,798 51,472 100, 199 148,933 157,503 130,026 222,375 138, 915 116,947 144,132 115,431 133,175 187,931 284,758 46,515 23,555 109, 363 16,511 471 615 110 5 .30 2 Baldwin 619 19 1,141 11 a 410 103 103 58 309 66 4 Bibb 5 Blonot 3 7 6 6 Butler 15 8 281 237 544 42 10 281 238 7 Calhoun 150 123 57 40 11 83 1,055 1,536 65 2 51 1,011 842 6 25 R Chambers 9 58 3 23 7 5 5 ]ft 30 n Clarke 10 12 Coffee 60 13 532 12 1,000 500 2,623 490 100 13 Conecuh 3,979 19,574 97 6,337 1,253 588 3,503 649 4,925 100 393 2,915 200 3,944 500 24 2,103 2,427 1,190 707 140 11,755 3,999 60 2,312 576 100 11,433 10,258 6,600 9,787 4,219 725 169 SO 950 150 21 90 18 11 14 Coosa 1 15 Covington 16 Dale 17 DaUas 106 14 29 18 140 15 201 2,398 2,520 4,839 237 1,970 68 2,753 4 155 18 DeKalb 1,391 5 30 19 Fayette 16 10 122 1,090 227 12 165 550 100 20 Franklin 332. 10 24 20 240 5 21 Greene 22 Henry 100 891 1,037 23 5 41 94 Jefferson . 25 Lawrence 68 100 16,725 400 2,483 2,379 3,322 5,539 5,641 2,491 1,028 388 2,612 1,036 469 16 1,001 48 1,405 8 7 PR Lauderdale ... 6 148 106 299 473 134 60 130 142 84 10 38 27 Limestone 14 260 28 29 Madison 1,898 60 187 647 113 88 13 16 15 30 105 30 150 5 31 Marion ,32 Marshall 30 392 89,255 16,464 55 4 8 20 33 148 865 560 319 143 231 529 343 10 71 963 42 1 34 Mobile 20 175 388 400 50 110 35 Montgomery 1,134 1 20 2 10 36 10 1 12 .37 2,753 824 15 13 256 118 71 2,152 1 38 Perry 11 15 39 Pickens 40 Pike 35 2,457 4,880 330 41 Randolph 147 a 35 315 1 7,545 1,962 3 130 2,723 33 4,818 1 15 807 42 RusseU 43 Shelby 44 St. Clair 45 Sumter 355 31 3,383 104 36 2 1,124 S9 20 1,341 150 240 75 46 Tallapoosa 47 Talladega 2 48 Tuscaloosa 52 5 26,344 374 480 453 170 2 49 Walker 50 Washington 2,311 714 ."il Wilcox 3,026 20 12,577 2,568 75 698 100 50 1,439 40 5 1 .53 Winston 2 6 Total 15,135 1,347 223, 312 18,267 163,062 6,028,478 15,933 62,211 244 630 507 STATE OF ALABAMA. AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. o •a CO o s 7^ t> >t H Jp an •a .q y LIVE STOCK. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 Arkansas Asliley Benton Bradley Calhoun Carroll Chicot Clark Columbia Conway Crawford Crittenden Craighead Dallas DeBha Drew Franklin Fulton G-reene Hempstead — Hot Spring Independence . Izard , Jefferson Johnson Jackson Lafayette Lawrence Madison Marion Mississippi Monroe Montgomery . . . Newton Ouachita Perry Phillips Pike Poinsett Polk Pope Prairie Pulaski Kandolph Saline St. Francis Scott Searcy Sebastian Sevier Union Van Buren Washington . . . White Yell Total. 45,493 44,225 41, 183 46, 906 19,641 39, 742 66,423 37,564 87, 446 21, 747 21, 568 19, 897 8,879 50, 786 42, 264 44, 858 33,033 15, 065 14, 908 65, 548 25, 400 51, 769 28, 945 65, 387 32, 569 40, 597 47, 390 44, 795 34, 558 19, 436 17, 584 25,284 15, 703 11, 597 74, 000 8,735 83, 737 14, 289 15, 478 13, 807 35, 577 35, 704 35, 926 22,517 28, 629 38, 730 18, 871 18, 765 25,767 49, 910 101, 424 15, 759 59, 379 30, 692 27, 427 1, 983, 313 288,767 209, 953 150, 019 208, 115 52, 89S 69, 624 155, 071 161, 270 332, 785 181, 016 40, 252 88, Oil 38, 831 201, 105 125, 800 320, 868 89, 039 91, 023 90, 815 211, 138 139, 691 183, 946 198, 932 230, 833 118, 875 108, 028 137, 965 177, 199 63,187 55, 205 165, 602 94, 343 18, 019 19, 351 269, 631 42, 974 276, 374 63, 605 75, 632 19,342 80, 279 163, 185 148, 520 136, 927 123,368 19.3,000 69,230 29, 550 120, 407 236, 511 306, 557 84, 7U 174, 803 134, 117 134, 097 $5,498,395 2, 532, 356 1, 411, 920 2, 084, 198 499,136 836, 970 4, 399, 554 1, 254, 607 2, 041, 073 923, 263 615, 073 2, 408, 415 268, 982 1, 530, 234 4, 098, 240 1, 062, 123 1, 030, 882 466, 340 575, 574 3, 029, 418 797, 525 1, 695, 951 750, 076 6, 952, 596 947, 405 2, 063, 231 2, 356, 283 1, 089, 470 757, 783 462, 936 1, 741, 201 1, 458, 212 294, 250 190, 491 1, 988, 237 422, 441 8, 037, 268 439, 436 912, 217 297, 360 1, 032, 383 2, 051, 830 3, 361, 692 711, 021 690, 206 2, 498, 918 520, 782 318, 193 956, 068 2, 284, 692 2, 089, 904 506, 147 2, 010, 927 1, 193, 912 1, 201, 951 7,590,393 91,649,773 $175, 999 126, 402 70,544 109, 668 30, 647 62, 775 234,555 65, 452 156, 534 33, 470 50, 663 51, 871 16,589 75, 500 128, 064 67,024 42,288 25, 268 45, 666 156, 522 64, 013 107, 267 32, 496 276, 942 155, 482 93, 719 70, 945 72, 614 59, 917 33, 379 22,829 54, 438 30, 635 17,202 102, 852 24, 518 169, 685 35, 032 40, 279 28,554 67, 086 53, 992 105, 600 24,187 54, 153 82, 091 41, 763 26, 610 49, 509 107, 022 136, 719 34, 006 123, 783 30,814 19, 692 4, 175, 326 1,586 1,411 3,205 1,460 598 3,746 1,148 2,114 1,911 1,990 2,110 1,205 566 1,158 1,017 1,606 2,492 1,295 1,564 2,738 40, 032 3,546 2,069 2,096 2,420 2,077 1,094 3,056 3,109 1,953 810 1,088 1,067 1,265 1,637 847 2,120 1,005 724 1,089 2,559 1,561 2,099 2,180 1,452 2,258 1,952 1,353 2,022 2,396 1,707 1,622 5,084 1,734 2,195 140, 198 1,679 1,042 625 679 279 579 2,890 726 1,688 443 637 803 83 811 1,257 2,401 660 241 268 1,549 13,428 690 377 2,117 593 913 *,447 415 673 264 501 685 163 120 1,175 141 2,897 137 416 186 577 745 948 241 475 1,093 322 214 435 1,128 1,790 222 1,329 657 504 4,701 3,036 3,391 3,394 1,356 3,867 2,189 3,349 4,210 2,907 2,042 2,849 873 2,434 2,542 3,102 3,027 1,500 2,407 5,114 12, 262 4,840 3,032 3,539 3,019 4,442 3,054 4,178 2,828 2,362 2,319 1,819 1,855 1,079 3,046 1,324 4,586 1,485 1,334 1,532 3,545 2,788 3,832 2,762 2,596 3,657 2,386 1,679 3,537 5,213 3,844 2,320 4,395 2,994 3,230 57, 358 171, 003 1,061 1,420 1,748 1,594 566 2,937 1,185 1,434 1,524 1,240 782 633 392 1,011 830 1,377 1,318 965 1,335 2,004 8,498 2,117 1,669 1,687 1,792 1,311 1,370 1,990 1,774 1,452 634 837 932 895 1,358 515 1,768 642 626 744 1,511 1,255 1,308 1,414 1,130 1,423 1,042 1,249 1,308 1,648 1,694 1,454 1,655 1,193 1,456 78,707 11,059 6,266 4,883 6,164 2,084 5,656 5,682 6,564 7,793 6,349 3,268 8,543 1,892 3,508 5,446 6,931 6,534 3,482 4,923 9,089 11, 383 10, 581 4,327 6,984 5,895 8,577 5,921 9,296 4,215 4,662 5,081 3,873 3,508 1,725 5,784 2,874 9,530 2,671 2,891 2,929 4,744 6,755 8,852 6,537 4,075 7,117 3,074 3,257 4,457 10, 182 6,691 4,675 7,515 6,506 4,829 318, 089 1,816 2,408 10, 410 4,345 1,481 7,494 2,037 3,992 5,( 4,227 2,702 631 1,040 3,784 1,049 3,988 3,858 2,212 3,023 7,437 3,698 7,8 4,6 2,970 4,845 1,697 1,773 7,8 7,100 4,304 731 997 2,103 1,844 5,471 1,028 2,875 2,475 929 2,008 5,177 2,375 2,755 3,878 2,675 2,383 2,157 4,300 3,114 4,937 7,698 2,964 11,115 3,281 3,040 202,753 STATE OF ARKANSAS. AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. EC I i-s 19,834 18,006 23,044 23,175 10, 315 27,409 10, 069 29, 680 31, 069 22, 069 12, 015 16, 175 7,467 21,454 11, 757 18, 681 28,134 11,345 20, 821 38,843 29,349 31, 610 17,435 21, 657 28,533 28,621 20,158 34,748 21, 834 16, 783 18, 293 16, 353 10, 589 9,894 25,099 10,258 28,870 11,031 13,591 10, 125 25, 381 20,987 25, 008 21, 992 16,805 36,920 23,382 14, 906 26,550 .31, 949 31,663 14, 653 33,556 21,403 31,415 $633,069 446, 341 494, 380 395, 306 163, 543 606, 162 572, 910 461, 439 615, 518 336,848 297, 339 333, 843 108, 699 348, 141 403,250 447, 800 403, 743 201, 431 311, 609 775, 743 313, 248 630, 398 339, 969 658,333 444, 800 475, 397 461, 447 574, 338 408, 271 391,358 265, 395 303, 406 203, 406 171, 739 453, 696 145, 484 780, 683 193, 480 213, 315 189, 153 433, 068 334, 467 433, 798 390, 633 315, 245 570, 183 283,433 239, 008 339, 008 548,433 608, 365 274,913 747,078 345,628 375, 833 1,353 3,174 76, 791 16,835 1,840 53,770 50 8,405 26,182 11,643 32,453 1,785 3,700 16, 247 1,091 11, 479 23, 157 19,840 13, 033 19,933 17, 083 53, 650 39,462 3,364 23,202 1,344 3,059 36, 641 33, 038 36, 506 105 1,446 9,103 8,716 7,337 3,704 13, 573 3,710 3,316 7,104 24,393 8,828 4,214 14, 513 18, 963 11, 803 13,495 16, 990 27,896 19, 918 5,354 8,331 133,644 24, 114 12,935 107 173 6,356 663 41 19,960 319 1,944 481 35 1,341 1,251 1,349 484 94 1,656 696 1,259 1,418 157 1,079 211 108 257 4,499 3,065 130 205 1,401 603 85 1,265 162 50 236 857 715 409 147 416 S15 1,106 1,787 989 1,039 8,633 571 6,434 333 166 364,632 383,559 436, 495 304, 172 139,475 531, 669 329, 941 360, 797 456, 360 265, 119 238, 380 311, 700 91, 375 287, 691 339, 923 317, 287 401, 995 334, 388 287, 090 563,093 273, 385 604, 470 365, 073 490, 765 387, 293 332, 165 310, 430 480, 266 439, 663 393, 158 382,450 189, 988 179, 642 193, 157 418,886 88, 295 578,137 145, 800 114, 480 150, 540 361, 196 272, 405 385, 710 302, 716 301, 309 359, 697 240,810 294,115 348,538 430, 990 452, 553 374, 094 663, 540 300, 102 285, 730 1, 171, 630 22,096,977 957,601 78,092 17,823,588 1,830 2,380 35,449 3,629 1,083 39, 630 3,444 11, 622 3,858 12, 000 150 1,083 1,939 325 2,052 14,252 4,408 917 19, 658 5,557 33, 969 13, 975 1,585 31, 358 820 743 9,431 15, 429 13, 825 320 5,138 6,050 3,815 2,513 2,176 1,744 150 2,011 8,445 7,504 4,362 2,544 2,730 2,598 8,213 9,463 8,132 11, 518 9,890 4,747 85, 148 10, 837 11, 921 475,268 825 9,000 360 555 1,050 250 47 100 2,980 10 170 6 450 10 218 13 150 303 545 50 37,735 3,308 70 27,750 2,379 1,605 34,917 2,040 1,343 335 7,740 9,115 41, 750 144, 767 1,"019 14, 515 85, 990 199, 774 3,627 30, 306 8 250 27,500 39,,870 35, 967 500 1,245 8,576 17, 452 10 1,080 1,084 5,634 4,583 12,558 17, 420 4,344 3,904 45, 930 6,388 10,470 2,510 4,160 6,575 7,768 50 5,170 43,123 16, 335 11, 146 20, 178 9,435 7,931 3,673 7 40, 948 7,303 13, 911 3,181 198 4,675 318 9,229 12, 261 9,204 2,528 3 275 16,548 1,793 2,120 184 28,586 1,560 10, 483 17, 653 770 _21j063, 1,244 7,137 302 6 10, 276 1,372 26, 993 ',932 3,577 90 3,723 6,495 11, 157 667 2,562 9,275 400 9 136 10,897 17, 261 220 15 4,071 3,768 3,028 4,539 17, 149 9,148 4,391 18,640 4,701 7,552 10,903 8,735 5,473 467 1,911 5,985 2,302 5,576 9,568 6,343 5,731 15, 174 6,157 19, 656 10, 239 9,130 10, 318 613 2,415 17, 808 14, 338 .8, 787 870 1,038 4,977 4,958 4,461 2,138 4,689 6,107 1,012 4,399 12, 305 4,389 7,294 7,446 4,847 4,535 5,066 8,596 4,906 10, 560 17, 031 5,760 23,295 .5, 656 7,301 16, 489 31, 544 146 37, 767 993 93 4,633 9,364 43, 324 5,644 290 1,854 700 8,665 9,806 21,844 6,310 3,931 1,320 26,466 13, 499 6,196 1,768 13, 857 3,514 529 2,655 54 1,970 3,834 1,175 10, 120 1,653 235 10, 299 5,192 23,457 312 4,145 3,527 3,824 12, 200 3,528 874 3,134 15,^301 660 192 ISO 7,567 40, 635 2,783 533 16, 743 5,016 11, 084 8,213 10, 858 7,029 1,552 13. 069 11, 430 6,811 7,026 8,639 7,314 5,123 2,339 3,997 5,575 7,405 13, 709 6,008 7,519 9,281 5,888 16, 978 7,031 14, 145 11, 535 2,677 2,651 4,346 13,^41 ' 7,'730 6,404 5,828 4,856 3,393 2,031 4,007 11. 070 2,993 4,286 6,538 11, 357 8,929 15,337 3,339 3,908 11,364 3,619 5,063 7,377 7,333 8,503 6,953 18, 030 9,913 8,076 16,831 367, 393 410,383 440,472 418, 010 44, 949 67, 893 10, 437 77,406 23,312 14, 635 43, 076 47, 983 116, 771 16, 913 12, 908 7,181 7,264 59, 997 24,021 75,233 16, 760 7,404 19, 000 61, 199 33, 373 39, 300 13, 435 53, 349 18, 302 4,999 33, 604 13, 935 ___ 8, 265- 3,900 6,580 23, 315 13, 915 3,551 35, 897 10,515 40, 593 12, 157 15, 998 15, 094 20, 035 35,288 32, 485 4,01 40, 982 36,737 13, 037 7,550 13, 800 50,213 106,011 6,367 13,635 34, 644 21, 384 1, 566, 540 STATE OF ARKANSAS. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. 1 1 1 1° 1 1 ft ■= J 1 P m 1 1 ■s 1 •s m i 1 S > 1 f = m % T $S95 ' 4,750 440 620 1,237 170 $120 4,975 5 80,486 83,350 77, 191 123,683 27,939 16B, 194 40,008 41, 903 27,498 44, 903 36,820 26, 130 18,433 63,600 56,374 86,359 112,511 50,455 66,519 110,407 112, 600 203,389 81,510 81,573 115,537 4,355 50, 357 158, 543 97, 466 118,803 82, 508 35,841 39,579 31,873 26,364 31,215 114, 908 39,500 36,275 41,015 103, 091 93, 124 125,796 19,032 55, 139 64,534 43,067 45,874 72,712 95, 202 89,627 62,860 129,809 132, 670 98, 045 225 1,375 2 173 5 50 5 3 110 531 386 50 4 10 15 »i f; Carroll 145 5 407 17 61 7 Chicot 35 90 2,883 Clark 30 50 440 2,510 10 425 825 54 305 112 10 14 4 2 11 60 104 76 13 45 11 840 200 455 5 8 20 960 1,992 575 120 295 23 20 15 1,843 4,700 30 I'o Crittenden 125 5 40 Dallas 967 119 2 133 8 15 3,100 54 10 258 432 1,112 325 16 56 45 51 58 5 18 20 17 Franklin IR 10 a ^n 3 27 16 1 23 100 687 1,762 100 162 182 24 1,074 750 1, 196 54 13 48 1 77 22 2 4 t)0 Independence . , 2 40 2,425 30 185 3 830 32 598 435 97 448 57 31 37 Q'T 04 4,527 66 6 o^i 301 Ofi 5 07 Lafayette » ■. ^R 290 31 50 87 167 66 391 9 3 26 1 nf) Madison 75 250 154 41 40 156 ?n Marion -. 11 10 1" Monroe 121 250 27 30 5 11 2 31 15 50 4 380 63 14 Newton 3'i 1,905 16 Perry 24 17 PhillipB. .. 5,012 30 196 1,280 282 4 407 30 194 60 3 38 Pike 41 6 110 350 175 375 255 758 25 200 225 10 sq Poinsett 40 Polk 5 33 60 41 Pope 80 4,100 1,460 5 25 434 20 35 1,000 175 17,730 587 415 449 18 20 176 2 1 21 35 9 461 40 Prairie 200 9,330 1 43 Pulaski 44 2 5 12 41 Saline 46 St. Francis 150 130 103 11 1 157 4"7 Scott 48 Searcy 20 10 4'! Sebastian 680 848 50 357 15 3 75 40 110 46 2 51 Union 565 S2 VanBuren 290 661 12 562 9 1,781 11 37 ■il Washington White 243 30 7 450 505 85 7,025 14 1,015 26 26 20 20 fi4 S"") Yell.- 125 Total 3,158 509 56,025 1,004 37,845 4,067,556 16,810 9,356 95 3,168 146 STATE OF ARKANSAS AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. o ■a > •a £ •a i < HEMP. 1 i 1 00* 1 = u a to a i 1 '3 .a 'O il si t 1 1 ° |i 1 o a a i 1 B ^ S o p II 1.- 1 o ,26 40 10,484 10 195 17, 350 361 240 239 909 337 632 412 1,354 170 762 610 242 389 1,221 365 222 1,190 238 716 1,674 515 2,157 916 5fl5 2,922 175 58 38 3,399 889 2,081 95 2,252 2,073 10,048 3,370 6,089 11, 129 6,377 38,816 2,815 18,978 1,525 10,284 6,975 2,715 7,330 13,833 3,635 3,977 39,892 5,455 10, 212 16, 185 7,707 33, 294 12,402 12,762 5.5, 773 324 2,512 6,925 67, 043 10,274 32, 303 1,331 11, 686 27,098 2,325 6,042 14,123 13,484 11,256 19,653 32,856 11, 691 3,009 653 22,455 12,830 16,362 23,562 4,230 20,853 25,921 12, 972 33, 812 1,844 23,318 $283 12, 188 18, 761 64, 369 5,584 51, 119 $64,863 77, 009 69, 297 90, 482 36, 418 80, 223 28,370 74, 961 117, 106 68, 644 54, 587 36, 221 18, 464 63, 784 49,313 81, 960 97, 310 36, 312 60, 732 166, 914 88,446 143,282 71,393 89, 775 89, 134 13, 732 65, 299 98,623 87, 920 53,923 39, 060 58, 143 49, 609 27, 944 45,290 23,850 105, 091 45,488 21, 415 35, 265 75, 636 86,602 83,341 48, 964 70,523 117, 563 50, 8U 54, 009 62, 427 133, 766 .146,920 61,475 129, 095 63, 501 68, 705 75 153 2 3 305 54 1 46 ff 227 140 306 438 11,408 9,951 13, 117 6,541 70 3,767 11, 956 g g 10 20 25 2S 2 1 1,521 41 13 14 15 241 1,033 8,228 8,413 7,122 21,231 22, 767 26,257 67, 848 64,569 51, 110 32,163 2,043 32, 334 326 3,242 37,827 38,644 23,284 2,386 959 27,251 14, 843 3,597 3,952 65 15, 931 4,750 18,357 77, 427 4,362 _ 4,025 ' 7,980 13,237 8,335 14, 266 22,692 8,947 19,795 19,204 19,204 36, 314 9,112 23, 368 16 .■341 24 4 130 4 )H Of) 219 5,367 7,095 63 2,909 oi 450 210 20 160 2 3 1 2 45 1 ^1 *>5 5,698 7,746 6,547 405 "8 200 1,038 160 25 1,907 205 111 o(> ?0 Tl 1" 817 3,109 11 240 7 599 14 Ti 440 5 796 55 2,411 1,545 20 476 574 762 610 1,131 1,747 629 547 30 900 4,050 628 1,626 124 1,977 747 933 1,192 382 1,446 16 17 18 19 40 50 41 2 41 40 1 100 706 44 4'i 46 40 85 4,172 871 901 47 48 49 50 '51 25 509 1 417 1,134 12, 808 380 607 ."ia 45 9 ,53 90 30 M 50 1 55 51 90 306 3,821 545 5 3,077 124 115, 604 50,949 806,327 1,019,240 3,878,990 10 STATE OF CALIFORNIA. AGRICULTURE, COUNTIES. ACRES OF LAND. p< e B p. 1^ .1 " .9 •§ i LIVE STOCK. a s I 53 o I 2 3 4 5 6 T 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 33 24 25 26 27 98 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 3S 37 39 40 41 42 43 44 Alameda Amador Butte Calaveras Colnei Contra Costa Del Norte El Dorado Fresno , Humboldt Klamath Los Angeles Mariposa Maria Mendocino Merced Monterey Napa Nevada Placer Plumas Sacramento Santa Barbara . . San Bernardino. . Santa Clara Santa Cruz San Diego San Francisco San Joaquin San Luis Obispo. San Mateo Sierra Siskiyou .. Solano . . .-. Sonoma . . . Stanislaus - Sutter Tehama... Trinity Tulare Tuolunme . Yolo Yuba 82, 169 35, 556 58,654 30, 213 89,704 84,120 9,670 86,233 3,770 5,324 2,849 20,600 8,145 48, 294 92, 729 20,299 89, 091 101, 683 8,144 26, 766 58,335 218, 396 3,990 8,219 62, .333 83,423 4,143 7,181 204, 178 3,713 44, 107 24,964 418 S7, 870 162, 220 198, 768 37, 9.52 104,509 46,887 4,876 20, 313 17,265 144, 903 45,058 158, 746 51,273 116, 401 53,448 84, 960 121, 716 10, 159 19, 259 19, 431 23, 705 280 1, 012, 370 24, 696 102, 136 5,445 42, 600 687, 036 94, 791 52,464 63,523 8,795 113, 794 1,179,476 128, 874 104, 215 47, 595 499, 863 8,110 154, 913 310, 447 125,833 53, 079 7,012 21, 461 71, 528 80, 453 36,023 63,496 111, 388 10,021 85,288 40, 167 181, 375 74,355 $4, 247, 430 989, 045 1,157,980 491, 065 878, 240 1, 888, 659 250,500 943, 120 118, 140 324, 976 104, 800 1, 621, 375 176, 060 758, 339 523, 195 326, 830 1, 153, 970 2, 650, 095 304, 250 565, 165 481, 000 3, 470, 000 937, 660 280, 137 2, 962, 410 887,223 269,800 519, 90O 2, 327, 097 582, 700 1, 907, 697 396, 455 94, 800 875, 730 2, 529, 460 2, 989, 110 456, 460 1, 256, 510 946, 343 218, 760 372, 835 475, 260 2, 209, 273 1, 786, 950 $173, 254 51, 907 53,775 35, 197 36, 480 114, 529 26, 970 1,055 5,940 19, 760 4,150 44, 865 17, 370 34, 876 39, 622 25,620 41, 115 118, 740 19, 691 30, 976 29, 180 161, 182 10, 650 17, 981 167, 330 51, 498 24,450 8,000 194, 859 12, 271 78, 057 29,985 610 68,862 106,000 138, 857 35, 051 103, 366 96, 053 12, 005 32, 763 28, 565 165, 949 89,090 6,252 2,242 3,115 2,108 3,562 6,640 300 2,059 1,733 508 144 14, 035 1,123 3,001 6,272 1,671 7,263 6,681 792 1,929 521 5,925 8,708 1,105 7,504 1,437 5,157 476 6,789 4,726 2,322 1,054 27 4,075 7,561 10, 368 2,723 3, 767 2,663 257 3,924 1,039 5,017 2,035 503 383 476 374 196 504 272 031 125 49 395 691 ■202 70 178 141 351 318 172 178 501 575 155 79 257 45 609 8 716 72 272 78 41 696 194 448 118 416 336 513 321 322 378 322 15,904 5,393 5; 411 3,633 4,400 10, 083 904 4,400 8,714 1,633 690 3,397 1,804 7,767 8,310 962 3,047 5,947 1,200 2,121 1,724 11, 592 2,800 743 7,399 2,055 1,796 1, 182 7,696 896 4,939 1,728 104 6,206 5,116 16, 037 9,488 3,731 4,435 770 4,980 1,759 9,065 3,446 661 1,081 744 444 250 943 282 1,071 1,143 322 44 733 346 966 1,188 175 445 1,149 284 268 705 641 467 126 432 320 550 617 275 736 649 53 1,014 483 1,598 303 984 455 208 1,014 576 545 714 34,756 7,359 22,908 6,133 44,724 24,321 913 17,286 10,444 2,583 1,527 71,078 7,555 18, 921 28,946 27,030 60,264 23, 031 2,908 9,880 7,446 31, 014 87,783 1,362 35,216 7,447 15, 452 1,069 30,466 76, 176 11, 921 7,589 125 21, 413 34,767 31,385 18,562 24, 942 16,289 2,158 36, 379 2,721 17, 046 8,436 54,363 14,613 16, 6U 8,247 21, 880 25,402 785 8,657 30,885 14 94,639 7,813 9,979 9,3 14,181 190, 636 24,827 1,147 23,280 1,230 25,234 65,550 .5,232 18,607 10,407 13, 768 1,2 15, 831 92,950 3,546 2,034 55 2,403 92,083 35,589 11,280 28,989 21,475 260 16,521 2,124 40,251 24, 013 Total - 6,262,000 48, 726, 804 2, 558, 506 160, 610 3,681 f05, 407 26, 004 948, 731 l,0Re. ;?^^,He7 STATE OF CALIFORNIA. 11 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. I •I .1 i-s 7,621 11,427 25,590 7,854 22,937 16,148 2,883 19, 762 5,892 4,266 1,400 1,494 3,373 3,477 21,056 5,240 3,840 18, 572 4,498 13,622 841 19, 394 153 531 7,679 3,853 633 573 19,024 1,092 6,876 14,924 304 6,280 18, 453 35,149 5,039 19,240 15,931 1,936 32, 546 2,268 26, 172 17,153 $1, 645, 399 788, 351 1, 007, 130 541, 604 1, 349, 795 1, 291, 528 149, 180 731, 104 293,450 149, 939 117, 505 1, 451, 089 269,345 754,748 1, 193, 882 642, 111 1, 073, 309 957,025 289, 880 513,157 467,400 1, 612, 226 1, 422, 435 141, 661 1, 325, 635 308, 907 412, 300 142, 205 1, 445, 212 1, 120, 810 701, 051 333, 210 21,585 1, 110, 317 1,591,898 1, 591, 648 728,581 1,217,577 752, 470 170, 427 1,212,381 325,465 1, 379, 750 840, 335 685, 042 42,094 130,058 10,241 99,250 407, 151 19, 116 10, 491 4,945 25,374 14,275 55,196 2,823 41,731 33,765 41,730 120, 811 591, 375 5,210 82,442 10,125 303,554 9,900 8,233 549, 195 166, 133 8,695 445,234 21,095 165, 502 32,686 456,396 35,585,017 53,969 427,796 276,564 22,597 141, 305 207, 295 7,086 40,263 13, 392 422,964 171, 762 6,110 220 1,540 10 320 40 10 200 95 2,085 2,350 60 880 1,800 803 5,185 11, 610 1,777 30 424 644 130 1,715 158 150 921 1,885 1,065 5, 928, 470 52, 140 16, 9B0 26,700 9,365 664 3,955 3,644 375 392 3,200 100 2,205 85, 010 200 1,597 21,740 17,990 13, 270 28,320 955 225 10 21,870 250, 564 510 4,750 475 150 54,231 28,875 408 1,000 16, 565 3,960 17,32] 2,300 5,585 35,420 2,778 4,335 17, 624 14, 375 425 325 116, 242 17, 716 500 46, 079 16,200 160 610 27,830 23,545 4,200 163 17, 240 21,880 100 9,620 1,250 13, 550 48, 065 1,310 2,500 5,135 3,360 75, 408 5,925 8,260 8,420 897 6,355 647 14,560 34, 740 95, 690 3,000 187,438 150 5,800 1,031 1,014 400 3,681 5,980 400 510, 708 2,140 3,150 284,735 20, 650 92, 400 10,335 66, 900 74, 108 1,130 17, 820 18, 794 28,500 485,167 31,390 31,330 67, 005 150,200 4,000 19, 000 24, 875 5,150 36, 477 260, 100 7,535 1,150 240, 937 78,223 38,249 83,062 32, 675 16, 900 150 146, 806 97, 487 13, 720 668 375 586 3,543 10, 595 160 100 19,625 405 2,465 4 1,876 956 1,160 42, 950 260 134 202 5,065 99 121 22, 985 205 16, 950 50 1,279 2,882 1,400 1,001 7,781 416 300 461 644 .592 255 246 3,056 149, 232 14, 852 13, 150 6,427 10, 343 25, 857 10, 637 1,030 52, 154 10, 865 15, 034 50 303, 905 18, 054 1,265 45, 178 4,450 7,070 2,507 16,831 305, 222 3,200 2,131 4.620 74, 730 190 16,350 14, 160 16, 405 78, 748 14,280 15,282 54, 004 321, 675 3,240 5,605 34,598 4,067 12,415 86, 780 12, 870 800 2,600 2,515 770 19, 200 1,050 1,840 480 108, 635 40 24,000 2,000 1,240 27,375 4,360 1,656 14, 010 85 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 2, 683, 109 165, 574 1,789,463 214, 307 12 STATE OF CALIFORNIA. AGRICULTUEE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. ■s 1 i .a r S 1- 1 1 II 1 i DQ a S i ■s » CO .o o 5 t 1 1 Alameda 828,015 41,580 107, 068 37,169 106,340 225,850 2,660 11,888 22,030 1,179 9,865 1,930 200 100 128,530 20,910 13,277 26,567 200 9,835 8,040 87 2,300 277 $129,720 26,840 4,925 28,972 600 11,394 9,175 48,466 1,100 3,350 1,000 8,920 3,425 81,000 42,765 16,925 48,797 76,915 149,618 18,925 66,060 2,524 34, 110 3,450 16,330 22,480 342,798 55,037 15, 765 89, 784 87, 825 20,650 30, 039 93,100 239,899 1,000 42,763 222,212 32,100 7,005 6,600 79,014 12,608 205,273 34, 660 400 105,902 120,275 303, 590 16, 315 27,901 10,640 9,025 39,380 10,700 180,042 72,834 26,872 1,930 1,320 6,610 2,270 215,586 300 2,560 13, 800 5,759 7,062 5,512 6,099 9,101 496 4,759 804 871 153 2,476 3,016 2,359 3,257 1,753 6,482 8,617 2,231 5,065 14,685 32,702 135 550 14,438 3,756 1,446 3,643 14,520 893 12,524 4,964 33 8,758 16, 194 18,353 6,238 7,709 6,721 1,035 980 5,321 27, 160 13,225 1 20 2 Amador . 3 Butte 4 >i ColUBl fi Contra Costa 3,062 590 20 2,527 7 Del Norte 8 El Dorado 84,815 150 410 300 57,290 150 300 6,464 3 q Fresno .- in Humboldt'... . 32 8,350 11 Tr]n.TnHt,h 19 46,455 4,990 29,570 17, 171 47, 148 154, 264 70,507 2,390 43,288 3,520 514,715 11,050 9,917 116,207 108,135 16,850 200 450,830 33,730 54,960 162,980 10,700 700 2,700 196,870 26,400 2,700 96, 310 23,965 755 6,250 13 14 Marin 153 135 50 1,139 710 IS Mendocino 100 4, 915 4, 080 450 32,500 39, 186 51,275 139,214 150 300 46,550 16 3,800 4,415 30,215 5,770 21,925 17 700 8,745 5 18 Napa 11 Nevada 7 90 Placer 1 722 25 "I Plumas 29 Sacramento 2,915 2,000 7 70, 360 11,700 2,450 30,095 5,480 400 4,550 10,550 8,520 3,721 106,740 50 12,080 181,105 15,500 7,800 5 93 Santa Barbara 24 San Bernardino Santa Clara 7 15 95 96 Santa Cruz 3,745 97 San Diego 70 800 72,800 11,490 3,500 28,476 18,310 48,930 82,040 44,520 8,187 4,525 7,350 8,800 66,775 5,105 49,260 24,060 80,320 "8 San Francisco . . . 89 San Joaquin 10,450 1,100 1,545 16,250 3,700 100 26,785 29,131 600 4,000 13, 670 650 1,300 54,980 18, 141 142, 490 50 8,510 14,310 23,585 1,000 .■iO San Luis Obispo San Mateo 335 2,114 31 1,000 3fi Shasta 33 Sierra 34 Siskiyou 25,486 153,937 125, 810 33,897 159,368 154,500 1,180 29,259 5,153 464, 980 142, 180 15 12,023 30,299 141,068 9,885 18,500 5,175 681 14,970 148 35 Solano 3,095 1,990 ?,r, Sonoma 3,803 37 Stanislaus 38 Sutter ; 2,450 1,375 ,19 Tehama Trinity 40 55 10 41 Tulare 42 Tuolumne 70 41,391 5,825 50 2,180 4T Yolo 114,630 3,330 10 50 Yuba 50 100 Total 4,415,426 76,887 754,236 246,518 1,161,855 3,095,005 1,343,689 305, 655 90 286 80 STATE OF CALIFORNIA, 13 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. O •a < > HEMP. •s ■f •s ■a 1 p< |"S" a El o I "S i| 9 o OB o i"" t if II 1 a '^ q o 1 i <4J O 1 1 ■s ID a it rt rrt" 1' J. ■2 . 1 11 $149,268 176, 661 71, 575 213, 030 44, 695 84, 989 32,665 354,054 1,650 18,551 21, 093 13, 800 72, 000 40, 177 32, 342 16, 795 59,718 67,303 110,300 67,665 74,550 37,103 35,500 16, 393 64, 645 10, 360 23,315 1 9 3 65 4 5 25 1«0, 080 6 7 8 lOO 30 q 17 in n 80,040 13 1,1 503 14 15 1,030 Ifi 17 150 600 48,794 18 19 16, 059 20 21 95 4,883 a 23 450 24 290 2,784 1,600 25 26 27 28 165 8,885 6,000 74, 907 82,035 166, 936 172,022 168,085 129,009 38,254 86,564 30,427 119,971 75, 995 139, 460 92,^67 148,912 29 30 31 33 14,590 1,735 4,170 1,024 .,1 2 34 100 35 ,35 36 .17 100 38 250 ;)9 40 8,711 41 42 31 325 200 43 6 33 44 6 552 584 12,276 255,653 3,449,823 ' . 14 STATE OF CONNECTICUT. AGRICULTURE. . COUNTIES. ACRES OP LAND. to Cm O 1 > t r3 1 s 11 1 LIVE STOCK. 3 ! S o « ' I' ! i < ■s 1 1 1 O s ■ 1 Fairfield 230,693 290,219 330.669 144, 104 241,652 233,857 119,993 239,622 68,321 94, 496 131, 941 56,533 95,327 88,804 55,235 82,799 $15,944,881 19,863,633 14,414,233 5,730,601 13,973,305 9,464,881 3,826,376 7,613,095 $31(i,222 553,633 365, 183 139,714. 347,517 250,818 153,377 219, 017 5,535 5,946 5,691 3, 191 4,872 3,468 2,080 3,493 35 21 9 4 13 8 2 14, 769 14,795 21,961 5,956 12,124 12,773 5,060 11, 439 6,479 6,906 7,593 5,128 7,368 5,942 3,049 5,474 13, 673 14,493 20,493 7,871 13,623 10, 927 5,155 9,856 9,021 18,386 25,106 8,206 14,643 24,454 7,676 15,615 3 Hartford T Litchfield 4 Middlesex . 5 6 New Haven 7 Tolland R Total 1,830,807 673,457 90,830,005 2,339,481 33,276 82 98,877 47, 939 95, 091 117, 107 ■ AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. - PRODUCED. DD 1 1 1 n 1 § fcD a 1^ i a, ■s 1 1 i i ■s 1 1 Clover seed, bushels of. so 1 S 1 : 1 846 1,343 3,897 438 3,619 8,718 1,147 1,805 46, 635 33,920 53,686 24,307 49,063 26, 915 20, 587 53, 995 577,972 120,013 65,333 44,643 83,057 45, 727 19,783 52,320 16, 590 6,905 3, 1358 3,728 12,048 3,025 1, 176 953 $107, 539 144,768 4,907 4,174 39,810 25,004 4,766 6,057 1,357,207 1,308,370 1,541,109 570,855 988, 134 881,955 360,095 613,187 102,984 302,497 2,406,801 37, 186 137,774 272, 178 107, 946 541, 945 83,499 87, 721 109, 901 45, 865 79,933 63,307 311 116 483 15 166 377' 433 85 525 231 202 2,424 82 9,053 305 43 196 80 392 14 35 5 o Haftford i fi 7 Tolland R Windham ... . 60,550 1 11,924 1 Total ■ 20,813 309,107 508,848 46,783 337,025 7,620,912 3,898,411 562,425 13, 671 13,034 959 STATE OF CONNECTICUT. 15 AGSICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. 1 , 1 •g" o s DO 1 1 1 1 i ° .i A. t ■§ O- 1 1 o fit 1 a 1 " 2 u it 1 LIVE STOCK. a 1 1^ CM a 5- g g 1 1 s i g bo 1 1 O 1 1 Kent a04, 92S 190,456 241,684 104, 657 44,215 218,358 $8,778,258 16,633,176 6,014,923 $393,222 433,003 161,658 5,208 7,057 4,297 1,092 500 702 6,178 11,228 5,189 2,620 1,717 5,193 8,087 9,852 7,657 5,514 4,169 9,174 9 3 Total 637,065 367,230 31,426,357 817,883 16,562 2,294 22, 595 9,530 25,596 18,857 AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. (M o 1 1 1 O o s o 8,112 2,126 1.613 1,993 66,137 17, 591 573,075 18 STATE OF FLORIDA. AGRICULTUEE. COUNTIES. ACRES or LAND. §■= LIVE STOCK. Alachua Brevard Calhoun Clay Columbia Dade* Duval Escambia Franklin Gadsden Hamilton Hernando* . . . Hillsborough . Holmes Jackson Jefferson Lafayette Leon Levy Liberty , Madison Manatee Marion Monroe Nassau New River . - . Orange Putnam Santa Rosa. . . St. John's Suwannee Sumter Taylor Volusia Wakulla Walton Washington ., 37, 326 340 6,001 4,747 26, 196 153, 775 1,887 25, 341 18, 625 107, 621 $1,403,602 23,340 218, 540 126, 880 612, 492 $87, 924 440 17, 650 9,222 35, 901 928 41 125 270 751 747 4 115 119 359 6,589 1,374 1,055 2,100 3,682 137 13 176 267 83 11, 373 6,327 3,185 5,429 9,030 2,380 506 475 855 4,432 67, 235 2,511 49, 516 6,976 193 187, 125 79, 059 220, 317 28,875 5,000 1, 417, 050 441, 993 11,490 936 650 155, 450 17, 068 298 96 2 950 553 827 333 707 3,358 2,595 6,682 5,251 75, 812 69, 705 6,500 110, 609 7,773 7,714 59,328 2,261 54, 546 65 4,833 15, 147 2,768 7,441 2,281 1,504 15, 008 4,950 5,072 3,008 15,283 9,681 11, 245 24, 285 11, 959 149, 989 199, 466 22, 660 532, 222 20, 813 54,688 137, 404 5,602 129, 376 17 26, 840 52, 088 9,435 21, 270 4,215 14, 172 40, 190 15, 342 15, OSS 11, 642 97, 931 24,625 14, 584 178, 670 62, 753 1, 366, 189 1, 646, 074 179, 090 2, 482, 211 84, 017 373, 940 1, 460, 002 97, 095 1, 887, 115 11,300 145, 455 . 365,049 90, 555 210, 800 23,285 69, 530 300, 207 199, 873 75, 625 99, 810 287, 339 154, 671 86, 983 11, 031 5,856 54, 780 88, 293 0,544 94, 363 3,518 7,336 04, 319 6,512 83, 790 95 5,832 26, 250 8,681 19, 139 768 5,770 16, 139 2,302 4,590 9,672 14, 506 12, 052 11, 800 159 1,071 923 117 1,063 315 185 700 188 269 566 140 257 107 229 321 327 205 159 315 303 241 68 35 930 1,426 98 2,041 272 111 1,059 58 1,061 42 170 36 103 6 31 195 82 55 21 209 63 104 4,932 1,602 5,959 2,070 950 3,134 4,375 1,479 3,221 556 7,764 3 2,627 5,317 1,859 1,934 708 1,785 2,036 5,388 1,546 1,755 1,668 3,646 2,611 475 48 696 112 99 133 933 477 64 890 28 136 263 122 353 457 103 27 56 148 45 85 70 21 88 54 408 294 4,166 2,380 10, 483 6,494 32, 789 2,135 12, 527 7,522 2,052 8,271 7,610 3,983 6,061 31, 252 19, 905 6,174 18,519 4,759 7,448 1,509 6,439 4,504 18, 977 3,447 12,281 4,813 5,707 174 533 708 2,350 1,091 476 754 2,780 2,791 258 3,439 433 575 1,707 8 2,202 813 1,007 437 46 396 104 238 20 204 2,026 340 Total. 654, 21S 2, 266, 015 16, 435, 727 13, 446 10, 910 92, 974 7,361 287, 725 30,158 * No return. STATE OF FLORIDA, 19^ AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. cs 1 > i a 1 1 1 !' M 1 1 1 O 1 p< "3 1 8 g 1 □Q b ■s •a g I i to It 1 B s S -J 1 • 1] 580 $330,938 15,780 69,110 85,049 220,243 118 130,837 1,395 41,460 25,097 118,913 967 11,043 8,070 3,714 4,125 25,158 2,119 3,196 1,635 27,416 1,187 600 50 111 1,197 57,464 4,215 17,840 17, 151 5,033 1 1,164 2 507 9, 111, 800 100 20,000 613 178 1,284 870 360 2,030 3 6,085 2,245 176 9,701 4 49 564 8,833 5 6 3,859 1,124 50 47, 669 40,790 50 362,765 177,176 6 8 31, 555 5,790 10 2,030 22,050 16? 660 1,376 3,827- 1,660 775 70 600 711 980 35,082 7,060 700 117, 820 38, 410 7 8 9 15,834 11,241 50 856 255 497 257,565 117, 847 22,500 208 553, 701 275 4,335 1,627 5,831 1,309 32,253 30,240 10 2,169 11 12 7,584 3,919 23,125 21, 144 2,556 23, 266 7,684 5,142 17,050 2,805 15,797 255,519 58,350 399,002 398,893 46,937 503, 526 89, 178 75,257 347,410 194,400 447,268 59 15 43, 501 24,615 268, 660 357, 972 26, 617 421,654 15, 245 52,850 296, 361 2,622 151, 179 90 355 1,135 1,725 85 1,275 30 755 3,705 20 18,488 312 3,285 5,115 200 280 30,200 88 281 8,635 10, 847 918 16, 686 151 649 6,438 2 3,999 860 1,497 2,941 8,310 85 6,556 530 3,573 3,462 10 6,967 3,431 2,510 9,405 7,741 3,277 30, 177 4,627 2,960 47,715 1,890 44,694 389 136 385 185 152 2,056 512 381 55,425 12, 835 84, 099 81, 116 10,528 136, 038 IS, 274 15,227 82, 986 14, 9l5 94,861 100 21, 999 38, 690 12, 452 21,585 5,145 16, 144 26,067 15,690 18,006 13, 135 5,009 26, 444 19,225 13 25 286 830 12 1,908 14 15 25 16 1,620 33,990 175 18,250 17 18 19 149 947 29,875 1,000 2, 700 35,765 34, 900 150 20 1,295 21 80 3,407 22 3 15,154 680 23 24 5,778 14,965 2,165 6,653 1 627 138, 811 219,637 58,295 111, 850 30,248 67, 800 102, 148 173,914 58,134 113, 984 98,626 126, 711 87, 998 27, 491 61, 119 9,835 26, 830 10, 568 11,290 56,389 22,397 27, 100 13, 035 78,708 55, 979 41, 915 2,400 19,530 1,300 500 ]00 8,900 4,500 1,050 600 1,900 7,350 10,260 3,944 154 821 128 640 8 1 653 277 90 193 794 430 353 1,145 1,964 3,120 14, 653 2,710 8,699 785 2,413 15, 866 1,416 6,302 3,575 9,070 5,510 3,168 75 680 187 140 12 308 555 191 324 265 1,009 543 513 25 30 227 189 4,977 451 260 26 27 28 55 26 29 2,863 6,214 4,988 5,910 3,840 8,106 30 20 85 662 70 600 250 780 84 210 31 32 49 28 12 33 34 300 182 608 7,300 4,868 36,686 415 3,733 462 35 7,475 5,407 130 130 115 36 37 271,742 5,553,356 2,808 21,306 2,834,391 46,899 223,704 828,815 65,153 59, 171 363,217 18,766 1,129,759 20 STATE OF FLORIDA, AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. 1 1 1 1= o i h II 11 If r ■s 1 -1 1 1 o o 1 1 1 ■§■8 i g 1 1 I 1 $1,812 93 $60 32,851 2,476 9,850 975 15,239 302 130 801 2 Brevard 3 Calhoun 4 Clay 500 5,797 5,584 616 5 4,405 35 6 Dade 7 Duval 165 1,200 2,370 100 1,900 3,255 1,430 137 12 8 9 10 G-adsden 153 12,435 13,785 11 Hamilton 12 Hernando ^. 13 Hillsborough 24,410 5,800 24,208 24,589 3,950 32, 110 3,654 5,847 34,339 6,360 51,804 1,557 140 36 1,579 12 100 79 14 Holmes. 690 15 15 40 16 Jefferson 8,350 30 20 225 50 54 17 Lafayette 18 Leon 15 50 2,251 8 175 19 Levy 607 20 Liberty 350 21 Madison 22 Manatee 475 395 3 1,073 23 Marion 10 3,600 1,100 1,425 24 Monroe 100 25 4,111 65 50 25 Nassau 1,000 12, 104 5,712 9,365 1,050 5,385 6,775 12, 100 6,253 3,570 13,581 13,655 8,938 106 325 26 New Elver 63 40 27 Orange 35 28 Putnam 150 20 29 Santa Rosa 30 St. John's 500 1,715 2,010 1,095 31 Suwannee 82 220 32 Sumter 33 Taylor 34 Volusia 4,150 2 35 Wakulla 36 Walton 3 1,646 145 189 37 Washington 66 Total 8,369 21,259 386 20,828 408, 855 5,280 11,478 STATE OF FLORIDA. 21 AGRICULTURE, PRODUCED. ■3 o ■a >■ ■a £ -2 ■a 1 B *11 HEMP. 1 1 1 • CD o p< 1 = EC Q 1 ■s si r i ll 661 67 12 9fl Clark 91 2 2 04 Clay 9f> Clayton . "fi Clincli 162 97 Cobb 40 87 1,059 40 1,142 337 17 9R W 216 3,415 232 200 1,744 no Coffee 763 31 Coweta 354 169 30 1,567 698 29 500 50 12 39 m Dade 34 Dawson 128 467 111 518 5 181 100 20 4 400 as 30 55 2 3fi DeKalb 28 5 37 Dooly 17 3fi 993 1,456 3P 10 40 Eckels 41 163 651 120 326 306 281 325 144 130 2,245 90 1,239 35 125 789 695 48 Elbert 76 43 266 185 44 Fannin 141 18 30 674 474 175 110 19 45 Fayette 59 448 46 Floyd 2,180 100 16 28 47 48 Franklin 4 57 5 140 516 44 3,437 1,700 1,6S9 49 Fulton 19 159 SO 31 918 1 74 7 SI Olaescoek S2 Glynn 7 20 552 51 208 161 848 S3 Gordon 92 8,711 3,102 2,216 446 1,281 150 7,407 212 9,846 100 50 93 3,939 2 692 2 2,942 46 S4 Greene 1,982 53 63 75 316 58 12 66 135 61 117 13 S5 Gwinnett Rfi Habersham 15 50 50 7 310 90 32 6 S7 Hall S8 Hancock S9 Haralson fiO Hart 7 86 2 2,625 1 Rl Harris 62 Heard 434 4,582 30 151 323 1,645 63 Henry 375 64 Houston 356 375 1,135 65 Irwin 395 1,057 4,854 31 66 Jackson 114 257 634 376 5 40 1,422 47 1,239 5 67 Jasper 12 1,882 68 Jefferson 69 Johnson 215 70 Jones 300 212 STATE OF GEORGIA, 25 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. 1 r HEMP. i 14 "3 1 1 1 pi o o i 05 i Pi o .a ^ si o t DQ Cm § a .2 li § i 1 ° 4 1 ■3 1 1 i n 1 i i If I's 1 1 •a 49 9,989 6,129 1,433 20 360 671 1,111 501 320 734 441 517 1,275 369 4 256 745 169 9,975 305 2,770 8,529 10, 993 9,835 4,453 6,039 8,090 14, 640 7,235 4,312 $12,490 324 7,338 17, 493 8,385 1,383 9,868 1,450 11, 854 2,479 9,866 3,628 $50, 973 51,210 100, 632 46, 124 46, 092 92, 965 98, 756 24, 164 74, 593 176, 174 84, 158 57, 632 11, 610 78, 863 93, 750 116, 656 32,513 64,534 11, 728 76, 003 16, 095 • 98, 328 84, 934 57, 869 39, 131 41, 473 99,346 19, 376 114, 153 41, 931 161, 510 80,849 23,448 34, 135 113, 824 105, 721 123, 119 68,940 99,449 23,699 50,529 123, 431 69, 679 27,395 82, 843 301, TC6 38, 434 50, 816 38,511 53, 840 40, 571 10, 595 114, 173 157, 951 90, 276 55, 756 83,364 153, 084 33,254 58, 414 169, 828 97, 767 131,888 186, 959 27, 410 91, 487 131, 581 146, 031 42,603 131, 761 2 216 3,449 28 6,280 499 37, 582 1,967 4,507 1,125 •i 40 6 2 6 27 7 881 1,648 410 819 10 12 7 5,749 525 7,451 5,659 z,m. 285 808 969 1,100 3,053 1,028 4,546 403 1,434 384 6,199 60 6,303 5,015 805 367 5,243 50,452 1,228 23,739 6,891 13,695 1,945 7,056 n 5,925 11,940 3,683 13, 771 12,923 15,025 3,664 956 646 11, 601 4,175 21, 613 5,747 4,728 10, 130 6,615 22,351 3,101 3,133 8,484 13,770 6,512 7,409 13,933 8,989 9,869 10,963 25 3,494 2,436 450 14,050 11, 896 3,754 654 20,304 29,217 6,751 4,608 23,281 3,971 50 17, 146 41, 619 33,227 34, 178 39, 321 1,648 16,847 34,175 2,805 11, 150 24,477 1,310 6,897 14, 670 20, 364 2,297 11,934 6,134 14 1 2 50 10 17 60 2,979 18 129 20 522 546 807 602 3,395 643 251 255 388 1,515 327 129 299 657 466 208 4,236 "0 2 5 21 60 85 11, 130 7,449 8,811 9,367 38,472 14, 684 3,242 4,965 2,824 32, 911 5,813 4,239 5,303 3,810 14,687 4,394 "■^ 127 24 42 9 36 29 6 33 33 78 35 36 4 ^8 14 18 19 30 9 488 1,118 279 658 272 223 231 199 183 275 164 481 173 94 71 669 276 771 651 218 54 569 545 1,060 1,414 40 69 970 899 121 34 253 1,690 18, 137 8,560 10, 601 572 4,542 17,039 5,723 3,283 8,618 3,675 9,278 3,386 1,400 5,715 6,373 12, 660 14, 000 13,282 3,315 871 8,359 5,350 12, 896 20, 675 1,615 5,190 13,723 11, 526 1,070 55 1,842 39 41 5 338 4" 7,230 43 30 928 21 1 6,736 44 45 26 3 136 6,744 2,256 46 47 4,450 48 740 11,087 49 434 9 . 50 51 13 3,600 52 12, 399 1,624 1,760 53 20 110 54 155 1 10 5,829 56 12 9,473 1,514 57 5R 3,548 714 59 4 fiO 61 69 949 63 7,392 64 24 2,340 65 50 4,537 66 260 1,544 1,808 67 10 68 69 ::;:;...::::.:; 70 26 STATE OF GEORGIA. AGKICULTUEE. COUNTIES. ACRES OF LAND. I I m ^ d k a h fl ^ '•4 LIVE STOCK. a 0} .a LaurenB Lee Liberty . . Lincola Lowndes Lurapkiu . . . , Macon , Madison Marion Mcintosh Meriwetlier • . MUler Milton Mttchell.... Mtonroe Mbutgomery. Morgan M&rray MAseugee Newton Ogletliorpe . . Paulding Pifekens Pierce Pike Polk Pulaski Putnam Quitman Rabun Randolph . . . Richmond . . - Schley Seriven Spalding Stewart Sumter Talbot Taliaten'o . . . Tatnall Taylor Telfair Terrell Thomas Towns Troup Twiggs Union Upson Walker Walton Warren Ware Washington . Wayne Webster White Whitfield..-. Wilcox Wilkes Wilkinson . . . Worth Total. 60, 856 85, 840 46, 874 67, 105 34, 418 17, 506 88, 353 49, 533 66, 553 20, 037 162, 609 10, 607 27, 361 26, 699 194, 067 21, 696 135, 426 37, 430 69, 063 130, 279 88, 330 31, 684 17, 428 7,668 88, 913 42, 434 65, 519 128, 004 31, 015 14, 366 80, 854 51, 313 44, 383 77, 210 54,453 145, 983 102, 327 133, 933 40, 255 22,646 47, 705 18, 852 51, 395 74,423 13, 235 146, 245 102, 527 21, 076 97, 729 57, 173 133, 342 94, 598 9,097 145, 798 6,892 45,239 15, 000 45, 042 13, 806 130, 185 94, 373 21, 980 8, 062, 758 241, 728 113, 172 358, 319 74, 053 255, 635 69, 553 108, 176 136, 506 85, 345 107, 574 144, 479 49, 220 41, 460 83, 523 120, 433 331, 095 78, 113 90, 593 74, 938 137, 564 176, 483 60, 864 72, 960 134, 299 106, 457 76, 326 255, 686 97, 272 48, 469 135, 106 131, 360 159, 272 58, 735 330, 053 57, 793 136, 905 160, 742 108, 913 64, 453 491, 024 119, 778 139, 025 97, 169 152, 018 49, 673 113,526 129, 882 100, 567 97, 363 133, 365 120, 759 109, 927 197, 075 279, 666 127, 253 76, 915 65, 105 110, 165 127, 863 161, 428 154, 706 116,414 $1, 616, 319 2, 140, 429 617, 592 782, 140 1, 258, 205 331, 295 1, 680, 768 758, 797 1, 140, 302 893, 061 2, 432, 794 314, 595 327, 085 819, 057 3, 153, 690 389, 038 1, 394, 573 1,254,805 1, 514, 052 1, 885, 836 1, 766, 381 671, 708 384, 393 208, 710 1, 485, 948 1, 331, 713 1, 485, 870 1, 663, 088 574, 730 274, 926 1, 443, 698 2, 105, 079 737, 130 1, 444, 732 989, 600 2, 503, 959 2, 319, 466 1, 957, 373 661, 670 305, 905 1, 078, 678 295, 795 1, 203, 955 1, 630, 540 260, 662 2, 196, 064 1, 535, 777 352, 560 1, 413, 869 1, 469, 831 1, 342, 409 1, 525, 834 381, 671 2, 358, 563 145, 633 852, 643 336, 873 1, 546^ 585 285,977 1, 601, 158 1, 974, 014 527, 872 18, 587, 732 157, 072, 803 $36, 692 82, 433 51, 131 41, 203 44, 110 18, 150 51, 624 76, 561 59, 087 68,476 152, 066 11, 768 14, 558 34, 007 132, 542 18^ 981 62, 980 33, 358 96, 334 92, 871 74, 107 28,822 22, 457 7,479 60, 594 49, 640 76, 617 109, 961 20, 488 15,422 78, 879 62, 911 31, 130 73, 653 45,589 123, 214 126, 202 88, 197 26, 141 26, 762 40, 513 14, 092 39, 443 75, 757 2,797 92,230 48, 074 18, 231 68,447 59, 134 51, 476 56, 568 10, 014 100, 892 8,491 39, 384 16, 837 49, 977 16, 066 71, 517 72, 025 18, 054 1,346 573 1,073 731 580 614 913 1,218 650 401 1,570 239 1,644 680 1,315 1,126 711 3,016 1,976 955 587 362 1,074 823 1,157 1,288 320 689 912 1,484 436 1,244 803 1,231 919 1,143 751 890 827 537 576 932 654 982 1,043 2,466 1, 981 1,421 340 2,408 334 486 630 1,309 408 1,495 1,426 560 1,452 336 698 574 236 1,314 310 1,110 105 2,406 162 304 401 2,284 168 1,305 498 843 1,346 899 357 254 37 1,260 608 904 1,618 427 144 1,122 914 661 913 831 2,373 1,553 1,954 456 203 730 134 874 1,100 148 2,430 1,480 125 1,344 1,045 935 791 58 1,039 25 731 186 479 85 1,304 951 231 3,983 1,885 6,835 1,382 3,625 1,038 2,085 1,780 1,853 2,633 3,760 2,124 1,022 830 3,190 4,366 2,266 1,343 1,649 2,911 3,030 1,343 935 2,625 2,081 1>148 4,113 2,528 701 1,122 2,011 2,122 888 4,171 1,612 3,284 2,126 3,306 1,307 4,871 1,715 3,058 1,477 3,689 777 3,095 1,288 1,278 1,968 2,471 2,604 2,036 2,116 3,330 2,335 1,208 816 1,573 2,930 2,602 2,454 3,245 601 512 411 557 140 539 414 975 408 274 1,193 274 460 262 1,184 324 738 632 302 980 1,403 736 544 45 699 644 584 646 280 384 472 185 240 166 379 850 .527 876 371 220 520 522 285 566 246 1,144 690 612 783 1,117 1,029 1,020 76 1,309 66 262 299 711 206 1,215 895 213 6, 844, 387 130, 771 101, 069 74,487 8,471 4,789 12, 830 3,424 8,616 1,831 3,779 2,481 2,985 5,611 7,785 5,036 1,973 4,513 7,716 10, 049 4,703 2,129 3,277 5,477 6,000 1,703 1,224 6,644 3,713 2,478 8,227 5,786 1,447 1,326 4,561 3,522 1,030 9,288 2,956 5,285 4,163 5,048 2,703 11, 982 4,319 5,829 3,160 166 1,678 7,191 4,324 2,480 4,969 4,661 4,386 4,301 7,138 6,341 6,174 1,779 1,001 2,503 4,828 6,709 4, 566 6,034 631, 707 6,379 1,836 5,840 3,955 4,7 2,899 1,795 4,577 1,281 1,354 5,4 2,3 2,116 ^,710 5,392 11,769 3,792 3,765 723 5,025 6,362 3,153 3,363 969 3,074 2,279 4,625 4,415 534 2,776 1,496 2,220 572 6,711 2,226 2,672 1,390 2,841 2,603 10, 514 1,074 9,041 1,109 6,023 2,854 4,835 2,128 4, 912 . 3,070 6,656 5,2,36 3,737 734 6,932 1,214 495 1,950 4,072 5,177 6,674 2,789 2,239 512, 618 STATE OF UEOKGIA. 27 AGEIOULTUEE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. 1 if d f3 •2« 1/' ^ o o 03 _3 o ■» s 23,363 24,430 12,542 8,835 23,747 8,123 20,322 9,593 17,649 5,843 32,125 5,813 8,668 8,373 31,422 15,637 14,882 10, 498 10, 352 22,132 17, 782 10, 843 8,749 9,103 17, 918 12, 065 20,865 18, 796 6,829 8,328 19, 979 11,849 10, 141 22,574 11, 007 27,978 26,332 26, 174 8,588 19, 995 14,097 10, 933 14,286 22,585 8,103 31,067 20, 613 12,587 20,407 22,677 17, 458 17, 487 11,029 37,352 8,409 12, 337 5,607 14, 160 8,905 18, 1?5 31,038 11,185 t342, 244 383,470 306, 398 ~ 198, 505 313, 774 109. 628 377,766 aiO, 640 320, 658 123,611 638, 240 103, 755 150, 176 167, 375 757, 455 239,350 358,864 217. 629 306, 269 509. 162 367, 620 185, 305 118, 708 119, 267 371,895 235,739 367, 472 415, 132 143, 347 119, 519 345, 700 417, 325 183, 468 366, 736 270,546 651, 516 468, 969 515, 656 157, 350 280,841 228,600 150, 355 252, 689 360, 249 104, 413 484. 163 388, 418 130, 172 394, 390 575,862 384, 810 329, 594 114, 997 572, 166 98, 554 212,803 108, 413 265, 500 125, 949 364, 196 455, 221 181, 840 5,038 2,250 30 8,043 1,787 8,22a, 13, 274 22, 312 14, 007 53,054 40 31, 195 234 51,537 743 28,389 38,580 2,387 48, 095 24,512 27,000 20,246 20 31,320 51, 967 2,663 29, 156 2,932 656< 4,728 7,323 9,568 287 22,769 18,107 8,396 33,365 11, 792 76 10, 748 338 912 100 6,479 48, 315 8,174 10, 693 ^,202 85, 094 49,237 24,670 28,009 15 7,754 6,626 46, 452 346 21, 003 19,542 353 814 2,149 35 338 2,222 1, 343 225 1,247 10 1,987 8 121 46 672 113 828 1,495 370 696 726 256 804 327 602 507 183 903 45 3,278 372 598 684 476 239 1,582 1,255 379 502 5 1,753 20 115 214 4,576 1,649 1,984 6,346 849 696 12 777 50 406 1,496 697 205 156 3,212 96 252, 163 319, 653 143,425 131, 100 173, 367 116, 827 313, 906 136, 187 275,827 43, 232 552, 670 49,805 164, 695 113, 562 547, 430 90, 986 261, 565 307, 004 224, 988 367, 177 253,055 182, 865 165, 442 39, 090 311, 990 205, 716 300, 359 328, 198 107, 516 101, 125 315, 502 213, 609 167, 493 264, 407 192,487 509, 399 386, 892 501, 505 121, 631 J.16, 232 l86, 092 90, 105 205, 495 337, 675 98, 571 520, 091 333, 985 146, 094 368,265 483,535 314, 310 252, 953 48, 102 432, 279 35,008 190, 220 117, 185 328, 040 61, 773 281, 305 340, 779 87,463 674 7,117 6,657 32,845 16,067 3,879 4,571 8,394 1,973 38, 124 315 9,285 175 25,487 1,258 23,568 12, 782 4,136 21, 825 26, 394 9,487 3,289 1,935 12, 962 29, 974 540 7,273 1,699 2,342 1,678 6,211 1,294 5,002 7,852 5,802 3,050 12, 403 7,493 16, 149 2,069 1,835 1,350 625 4,437 16, 052 2,760 10, 029 5,174 25,271 14,054 14, 185 4,127 339 700 1,851 2,822 19, 814 1,971 62, 361 2,940 3,001 200 5,800 2, 548, 382 1,145 219 15, 606 50 6, 421, 100 640 1,761 29 4,055 4,375 50 2,130 103 100 7,225 15, 416 2,410 1,330 10, 635 3,420 1,300 11, 126 224 1,485 2,321 3,500 5,600 100 1,440 95, 640 50 50 40 295 100 19, 445 168 400 655 3,316 928 5,330 1,137 30 40 7,000 20 775 355 7,812 15 11, 359 230 7,667 85, 868 807 100 3,397 50 300 150 548 310 47 100 1,290 3,048 8,888 395 8,865 60 263 10 908 4,016 3,826 276 476 265 6,934 14,445 2,405 3,504 2,363 104 10,248 1,901 9,075 752 18, 159 922 925 3,533 17, 165 313 8,097 692 6,925 7,983 8,762 2,349 10 226 8,116 6,042 8,284 11, 319 4,556 11, 276 2,455 5,291 5,251 4,595 25,902 14,423 15, 366 3,203 628 5,362 835 6,654 6,582 17, 978 13, 431 52 9,069 787 5,551 8,528 137 12, 421 169 6,846 100 102 791 8,526 10,804 1,657 16, 553 4,036 10, 667 6,157 10, 980 4,661 3,868 7,531 1,692 600 8,391 10, 019 3,045 6,717 8,818 25,092 6,742 6,607 973 8,059 9,077 5,830 5, 827 1,872 5,514 7,429 7,750 7,152 798 6,680 872 4,567 565 15, 601 3,645 3,886 2,437 5,272 3,230 19, 201 1,590 21, 643 2,317 17, 013 4,031 4,737 3,399 6,844 5,248 9,637 6,123 6,858 1,809 11, 458 1,570 993 3,502 7,267 13, 631 10, 856 3,138 5,632 18,325 34, 599 28,733 6,494 59, 095 1,444 37, 876 4,438 9,059 5,875 26, 883 5,056 2,381 3,558 45,323 2,892 10, 334 6,221 21, 059 20, 865 8,431 3,763 2,479 1,895 8,562 7,705 6,984 6,922 2,394 2,132 9,567 9,822 18, 902 33,738 4,313 18,637 12,483 40, 409 10, 138 13, 180 17, 883 14, 552 11, 777 46, 665 866 4,356 40, 465 1,662 5,049 7,064 10, 342 46, 740 3,443 9,646 1,581 4,109 1,210 2,630 6,962 11, 994 61, 488 15,378 1,071 930 75 2,376 448 4,866 2,840 774 1,312 8,847 94 1,408 526 8,686 377 1,111 2,519 546 4,235 8,966 1,303 3,323 37 3,372 3,525 1,133 4,105 78 5,533 332 4,233 1,019 212 848 2,395 483 3,638 2,925 762 1,633 55 1,007 3,449 2,708 4,355 5,732 3,314 3,841 2,737 3,952 S28 133 879 2,895 4,213 685 1,488 1,927 480 68, 985 J9, 991 120, 740 16,096 92, 178 16, 000 84, 058 27, 953 60, 449 54, 950 11, 976 14, 933 35,938 27, 576 129, 035 41, 929 45, 161 24, 265 48, 607 75, 733 51, 504 35,068 31, 785 32, 791 59, 781 22, 182 67, 514 58, 386 31, 103 7,824 86, 138 65,831 44, 948 52, 592 32, 126 130, 788 92, 934 87, 780 16, 198 85, 295 42,389 54, 379 38, 911 101, 372 7,633 67, 599 69, 306 10, 680 73,139 45, 654 60, 533 68, 592 30, 320 107, 362 35, 150 46, 633 19, 909 34,228 - 35,540 43, 379 91, 388 35,836 2,036,116 38,372,734 3, 544, 913 115, 532 30, 776, 293 1,231,817 52, 507, 652 919, 318 701, 840 1,765,214 303, 789 6, 508, 541 28 STATE OF GEORGIA. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PEODUCED. DQ 1 1 S 1 S 1 = 1 "S P <.4 P. ° s 6 Cm 1 1 a ■s 1 1 1 1 1 I m 3 ^ P 5 i 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 5 $715 380 106 101 t20 16,247 37,105 18, 917 27,533 33, 454 24,238 34,306 79, 889 42,501 1,138 21 964 54 2 -. 16 22 22 199 8 5 4 5 291 3,097 75 274 227 32 342 1,566 5 575 3 30 2 25 222 8 171 20, 142 429 1, 453 147, 199 5,359 36,779 24,717 156,380 15,537 59,435 46, 179 38,578 104,672 97,545 36, 677 23,721 6,527 87,917 48, 126 27,030 70, 102 14,213 26,046 5,820 27,803 19,976 24,401 47, 746 71,430 37, 297 69,989 37,940 18, 870 28,487 9,978 21,402 31,655 19, 197 34, 431 27,469 30,298 67,654 37, 695 108, 631 38,215 4,726 51, 345 6,475 26,921 17,388 62,775 8,886 59,777 38, 022 16, 081 Miller 46 232 76 3 2 10 20 1,520 22,661 1,400 10 2,189 2 1,905 197 579 12 2,298 1,462 2 454 5 38 646 121 117 57 3 657 184 4 25 159 5,117 100 47 6,790 63 185 45 59 252 120 20 2 90 85 1,390 2,499 330 558 3 50 268 5 Pike 251 4 30 892 300 7 567 116 520 710 80 11 27 873 Polk Pulaski 3 600 50 1 20 3 12 98 99 3 10 4,531 50 12, 031 2,857 145 280 6,316 266 100 101 670 83 22 2 20 22 110 32 36 27 707 114 5 413 86 174 44 450 119 670 297 375 59, 310 405 3,474 593 12 Schley 10 3 104 105 215 200 2 280 106 107 108 1,529 618 282 31 1,005 7 110 111 Taylor 39 3 42 2,505 135 27 801 Telfair . . 500 in 114 200 365 ii=i Towns 1,020 105 257 45 3,710 61 8 15 116 Troup 393 5 10 694 90 152 82 20 146 12 7 494 20 32 1,517 61 117 Twiggs 2 118 Union 21 1,854 12 205 51. 58 9 105 lit Upson i«n Walker 1,798 75 191 Walton 1,444 1W> Warren 20 90 115 11 lo^ Ware 205 40 104 Washington 12 88 iw IW 13 10 2,230 3,066 80 10 60 12, 256 882 136 53 37 1?>7 White 3,497 200 25 270 1,094 117 423 3 1,952 2 387 198 Whitfleld 29 IW Wilcox 130 Wilkes 559 4 3,038 50 150 7 131 Wilkinson 139 Worth 1,286 520 14, 682 2,023 176, 048 27, 646 201, 916 5,439,765 15, 587 46, 448 635 1,914 199 STATE OF GEORGIA. 29 AGBICULTUEE. PRODUCED. o s 1 if t 1 •i a 1 HEMP. o 1^ 1 1 S a 1 "3 ii o 1 § 1 ■a n O i h if n ■s 1 ^ rrt" 1^ 1 1 ° 1 •a S 1 ° 1 h r 35 693 18, 199 3,7a0 95 13, 295 3,318 7,622 62 3,087 4,464 210 7,701 3,787 1,150 154 48 313 237 721 456 352 489 342 1, 801 3,370 1,985 2,128 11, 683 4,228 7,761 9,823 6,631 |10, 654 24,514 85 5,530 11, 298 9,146 8,491 96, 281 5,390 $77, 600 118, 771 43,302 69,458 79, 173 38,789 .118, 975 71,814 110, 186 13, 230 217, 981 24, 548 47, 429 38,939 213, 466 40, 947 104, 944 66, 251 84, 212 150, 093 124, 652 55, 343 38, 019 23,007 109, 259 72, 191 118, 881 143, 085 34, 179 29,297 105, 459 135, 705 63, 275 79, 038 70, 257 151, 423 118, 637 94,607 50,288 87,083 82, 086 36,401 66, 422 112,365 25, 701 175, 524 114, 140 33,298 143, 741 101, 646 113, 617 116, 103 39,246 184, 862 20, 683 67, 533 25, 839 83,153 36, 645 126, 694 132,254 45, 430 71 72 36 ■■ 74 180 S09 30 76 77 40 1,043 79 2 2,488 18 422 18 954 63 210 273 148 994 .311 307 330 1,197 658 121 296 601 439 560 649 ■^413 273 186 208 1,739 375 1,670 405 662 167 27, 199 293 8,698 1,250 13,282 631 1,290 5,611 4,572 14,542 6,380 13, 411 6,026 9,559 11,452 1,973 1,944 4,643 6,993 9,282 16, 943 5,155 4,460 1,053 4,535 24, 394 7,929 18, 003 2,397 8,397 5,719 30, 133 3,044 14, 877 3,596 16, 718 18, 763 1,880 40, 959 563 30, 030 10, 510 14, 118 16, 973 4,047 11, 250 10, 739 4,037 3,995 1,208 7,511 2,034 404 3,103 5,765 4,546 4,890 8,732 6,877 * 4, 042 10, 800 8,642 7,241 24, 009 32,875 13, 357 2,742 4,882 14, 794 12, 403 14, 200 20, 376 7,979 3,757 26,461 1,421 2,390 11,144 10, 432 9,991 5,184 11,915 8,448 81 82 1 83 23 10,460 1,184 85 10 9,861 3,305 86 87 215 3 15,244 3 710 2,744 575 1,010 90 3,639 1,144 2,336 2,634 9,105 585 543 •a i 1 •1 .1 a < CD 1 1 = ■n g 1 ft s r o 1,795 128 11,880 697 8,090 $4,396 $468, 374 1 9 45 250 9,203 80 50 5,742 30 14, 991 10, 686 70 538 3,467 3,203 6,159 32, 058 20,003 235 23, 848 1,521 14, 707 15, 997 494 4,773 2,092 1,317 25, 154 4,799 7,192 7,494 525 7,221 50, 184 1,604 4,428 1,934 7,391 32,563 422 8,564 27, 159 5,295 3,148 16, 093 14,834 1,192 1,950 844 4,008 5,937 43 59, 515 95 4,117 9,538 261 3,776 2,728 27, 507 923 5, 519 2,823 6, 574 190 6,800 5,341 10 200 1,031 987 252 14 463 940 214 956 667 610 371 1,328 1,003 536 65 443 58 1,537 748 336 1,151 1,128 1 244 1,938 221 655 111 381 1,421 22 506 99 477 169 1,346 918 128 798 92 1,011 612 175 1,071 1,028 287 803 96 385 93 813 741 20 1,745 472 915 90 120 6,435 23. 919 10, 890 13, 340 2,600 12, 173 17, 111 13, 191 19, 934 33,380 5,275 15,275 17, 803 16, 756 15, 116 10, 918 20,994 8,375 18, 592 21,565 5,877 22,641 24,009 220 16, 018 45, 442 4,595 17, 824 9,793 8,235 43,816 868 11, 635 2,190 11, 539 5,200 42, 208 26, 363 10, 211 15, 584 599 33, 747 20, 814 865 17, 301 5,173 11, 029 13, 956 4,780 7,454 5,156 25, 093 14, 244 10, 669 4,375 42, 975 11, 847 3,140 5,170 5,971 55 21, 687 125 1,590 628 3,568 3,624 2,823 17, 839 16,344 75 7,355 1,112 23, 376 7,349 1,448 3,583 1,209 638 15,040 6,392 6,681 13, 820 60 22, 693 36, 266 5,342 16, 409 93 161 1 86 183 240 43 91 264 254 89 115 98 85 189 110 154 30 166 227 54 126 147 62 74 106 6 88 529 76 123 52 68 298 23 182 149 86 117 68 123 97 220 81 219 124 138 203 91 177 94 106 70 96 139 133 221 197 393 366 60 108 240 534 345 988 411 030 420 687 549 963 568 280 834 464 666 921 363 025 192 820 634 792 087 539 804 300 810 "411 392 709 277 812 143 193 910 674 627 571 876 733 885 610 715 147 440 063 966 793 219 883 516 139 393 182 109 937 550 847 693 4 100 1,631 34 <) 6 1 7 ft q 1,393 143 10 600 740 180 175 209 3 11 5 4,222 1,810 67 551 I*' n 14 40 789 12 117 895 100 2,103 1,980 100 305 20 330 10, 784 50 2,196 360 140 15 13, 500 813 280 16 17 1 IS 19 46 104 85 319 400 50 3,550 551 5 96 "0 ■•l 30 457 8 2 10 40 9 43 8 98 987 on 998 ")■) "4 9'i 50 60 '>6 W 215 266 "ft 9,820 351 509 434 46 5,725 260 240 75 3,501 553 6,810 203 468 792 777 38 99 30 31 S 3' 20 157 600 15 40 12 225 25, 538 9,061 3,126 1,936 6,040 2,568 8,875 18, 716 28, 518 705 61, 812 27,260 5,943 1,507 33 34 200 35 360 36 20 500 1,000 143 70 1,534 4 200 52 37 101 55 155 3,632 6 3ft 39 1,840 3 40 41 4" 43 382 1,374 225 2,195 50 1,571 40 155 44 ■15 3 180 15 25 46 47 70 8 5 64 5,203 2,068 10 12, 003 40 1,784 3,036 6,452 3,837 544 265 13, 151 2,106 2,002 244 48 49 .50 1 812 14 47 695 195 "^I 19 491 800 3,624 96 ■'Vt 54 350 101 132 20 55 .-id .57 .W 6 2 510 187 310 ao ,59 60 11,284 150 99 fil 62 34 STATE OF ILLINOIS. AGRICULTUEE, COUNTIES. ACRES OP LAND. a a §■3 .S " a LIVE STOCK. ■s I 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 83 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 93 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 Mason Maseac Menard ...., Mercer Monroe Montgomery Morgan ..... Moultrie..... Ogle , Feoria Perry Katt Pike Pope Fulaslci Putnam Bandolph ... Hichland Bock Island . St. Clair .... Saline Sangamon-.. Schuyler Scott Slielby Stark Stephenson. . Tazewell Union Vermillion... Wabash Warren Washington . Wayne White Whiteside... Will Williamson. . Winnebago. . Woodford... Totfil... 119, 435 25,914 104, 231 149, 535 76, 526 127, 484 202, 838 71, 467 260, 190 173,557 62,799 97, 511 172, 816 30, 100 10, 395 50,038 96,070 45, 630 110,693 196, 735 46,150 314, 271 74, 066 66, 641 141, 537 125, 214 209,756 215,266 53,880 247,167 37, 083 188, 161 129,689 67, 194 72, 503 161, 602 243, 086 63,796 194,646 149, 089 13, 096, 374 63,611 57,521 49,545 95, 484 110, 566 78, 187 80,236 31, 974 103, 019 34,612 77,929 40, 074 143,135 83, 518 22,795 20,019 162,020 48, 216 59, 715 120, 954 111, 521 65,241 92, 582 47, 031 118, 309 21, 728 88,275 112, 429 86,280 136, 428 43, 603 77, .395 106, 154 90, SOB 126, 473 114, 140 50,889 132, 605 49, 115 66, 605 $3, 029, 529 689, 940 3, 466, 631 4, 751, 115 3, 005, 870 3, 336, 107 9, 019, 910 1, 854, 963 8,226,291 6, 812, 219 2, 256, 945 3,744,850 6, 570, 936 730, 814 317, 939 1, 882, 336 3, 345, 607 1, 454, 060 3, 757, 900 10, 721, 968 1,343,220 11, 866, 486 3, 670, 885 2, 649, 477 4,324,487 2, 979, 105 7, 016, 265 7,198,430 1, 789, 223 6, 900, 813 1, 259, 800 6,448,857 3,806,752 1, 577, 743 2, 267, 274 5,308,231 6, 824, 080 1, 812, 527 6, 451, 329 4, 685, 920 1315, 869 47, 005 141, 786 234,283 138, 451 168, 461 237, 832 73, 844 388, 471 314, 944 106, 188 68, 853 237, 939 36, 089 14,382 69,817 157, 073 54, 053 175, 750 490, 737 45, 815 307, 108 93, 882 88, 387 153, 112 175, 337 306, 046 352, 047 93,448 221, 026 63, 550 243, 640 171, 306 68,384 86, 945 292, 047 258,066 83, 697 279,331 192, 504 7, 815, 615 408, 944, 033 17, 235, 472 3,730 1,233 5,348 7,546 4,756 5,429 7,795 2,585 11,071 9,211 4,127 2,667 8,727 1,591 631 3,077 7,289 1,839 4,677 9,579 2,579 12,607 3,946 3,911 6,140 4,609 «,723 10, 144 3,605 10, 801 3,181 8,381 6,997 3,857 3,499 6,585 8,965 3,439 6,986 6,026 563, 736 1,072 213 559 390 453 749 1,006 104 169 326 703 303 1,049 224 51 30 604 172 83 1, 890 433 1,715 307 429 433 65 124 363 353 192 174 724 1,012 269 380 118 119 547 58 100 38, 53D 3,492 1,549 3,418 6,246 4,198 4,009 5,084 2,086 10, 471 7,249 3,475 1,933 7,721 1,733 629 2,107 5,385 1,922 5,573 7,801 3,571 8,131 3,665 2,353 4,967 3, 527 9,176 7,606 3,633 7,084 1,773 6,690 5,799 2,756 3,375 8,255 12,893 3,434 7,850 5,074 523,634 90, 380 9,850 9,552 3,176 17,363 7,477 5,420 10,236 5,750 13, 047 10, 099 4,667 13, 794 2,881 13,025 12, 906 5,519 5,395 10,841 19,575 6,198 11, 625 7,207 13, 315 7,748 ' 2,286 769, 135 STATE OF ILLINOIS. 35 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED a •a £ o .a I 13,850 11,264 23,972 38,097 18,785 23,218 43,226 16,580 20,625 23,012 15, 115 15,315 50,919 14,627 5,473 6,371 23,157 8,556 ai, 942 37, 791 21,208 62,917 23,509 18, 020 46, 341 30,207 21,338 37,659 12,908 37,472 31,434 22,332 30,021 12,827 10,953 30,962 10,620 13,426 8,502,306 $644, 660 181,481 771, 731 1,042,551 586,422 746, 364 1,411,490 ^ 406,385 1, 353, 405 1,227,978 566,222 433,870 1, 162, 590 221,512 70,234 328, 070 721,025 217, 916 668,232 1,242,462 339, 661 1, 926, 254 490, 903 455,667 950,407 393, 248 960,577 1,227,511 351,629 1,214,677 253,142 1, 123, 231 790, 193 394, 967 504,940 868,659 1, 013, 059 491, 387 816, 879 679,888 72,501,225 237, aro 57, 157 78,272 343,020 366, 181 158,077 208, 970 40, 480 1, 153, 465 323,990 95, 518 75,326 468, 810 43, 872 20,840 114, 933 342, 455 47,627 295, 614 885,847 42, 180 303,747 95,381 181, 442 128,750 339,246 822,874 318,-884 168,530 86, 911 87,271 282,407 177, 875 56,800 101, 243 608, 574 251, 483 97,842 685, 915 280, 779 23,837,023 27,029 1,132 3,373 29,863 799 2,734 9,150 4,219 51, 405 94,030 384 2,424 1,747 678 31 7,116 1,876 1,007 6,892 240 348 11,695 1,096 1,919 19, 142 5,648 40,465 33,525 650 12,407 287 15, 462 515 123 1,114 6,260 1,915 375 43, 521 5,242 951,281 1,940,879 279,270 1, 544, 810 2, 042, 636 560,515 814, 037 2,452,100 1,088,241 858, 155 2, 465, 162 411, 892 1, 593, 280 2, 193, 622 321,565 92,105 487,305 736, 803 334, 595 1, 176, 436 1, 671, 763 485, 103 3, 599, 105 916, 798 699, 690 1, 659, 499 687, 627 893, 318 2,592,560 508, 670 2, 172, 428 375, 378 3, 205, 102 1, 178, 825 669, 579 8S4, 930 793, 713 1,020,989 690, 195 497, 973 li502, 435 115, 174, 777 67,138 922 87,523 158, 082 132, 726 102,264 70, 081 34,532 737,254 203, 203 39,832 30,033 75,576 3,272 1,404 83,320 97,618 25,234 132,344 245, 409 9,447 180,025 42, 339 11,237 66,253 123,778 570, 542 225,814 15, 052 88,181 15, 396 154,969 135, 675 23,788 44,021 320, 930 797, 530 7,732 396, 374 187, 733 15,220,029 100 48,480 3,373 30 930 4,860 8,275 100 3,485 870 16,325 475,300 10,585 1,098 705 5,395 10, 213 40 [, 043, 456 3,700 8,285 13, 142 3,230 17,302 17,127 3,124 5,021 8,725 94,542 254, 310 1,382 1, 708, 137 104 60 105 12 150 200 4,592 5,145 19,628 9,149 5,378 31, 964 19,336 28,062 10,020 8,400 14, 251 9,175 19, 180 9,097 1,526 4,650 13,002 12,778 5,025 9,071 15,384 139, 117 19,455 13, 112 43,221 4,893 20,289 15, 622 12,503 74,098 12, 170 22,049 14, 552 25, 914 21, 507 3,545 17, 825 21, 447 26, 855 8,296 507 1,985 445 864 147 943 263 536 387 1,730 1,961 1,754 313 660 156 274 1,309 624 560 816 3,743 466 582 162 616 127 472 879 1,113 2,655 452 545 5,416 3,024' 970 566 2,223 4,169 1,781 203 31, 551 21, 556 18, 614 57,481 31,890 19,359 39,354 12,843 71,511 132,330 11,040 21,683 60,927 29,146 6,529 68, 112 31,132 14,487 89,044 159, 671 20, 575 70,295 30,254 15,620 33,183 17, 947 93,038 75, 370 29, 672 51, 017 11,712 60, 334 18, 045 14,700 16,558 62, 840 167, 957 19,792 74, 738 54,022 484 6,422 2,620 1,640 1,045 4,397 3,830 928 274 2,193 6,671 975 4,070 2,978 3,211 906 20,182 2,225 227 10,847 9,340 3,349 580 1,268 2,265 184 39 3,359 21, 596 2,560 2,428 1,087 17,428 2,074 5,160 311 694 18,005 109 673 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 lOO 101 102 6, 885, 262 1,482 1, 989, 567 108,028 5,540,390 306,154 36 STATE OF ILLINOIS. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. a o 100 101 102 Maaou Massac Menard Mercer Monroe Montgomery . Morgan Moultrie Ogle Peoria Perry Piatt Pike Pope Pulaski Putnam Handolph Richland Rock Island ■ . St. Clair Salino Sangamon Schuyler Scott Shelby , Stai-k , Stephenson... Tazewell Union Vermillion — Wabash "Warren Washington . . Wayne , White Whiteside — WiU Williamson. . , Winnebago. . . Woodford . . . 630 196 670 8,028 46,929 2,609 1,116 394 67,482 22,202 445 1,501 892 8 6,043 4, 421 44 12, 595 112, 924 27 13, 707 1,100 6 1,341 3,485 .49j041 22, 263 1,210 282 9,800 504 219 111 18, 799 19, 384 40 19, 315 13, 315 3,772 387 1,280 3,162 900 3,971 1,557 3,804 484 7,595 496 3,225 3,192 33 1,076 590 851 1,965 1,319 398 3, 009 6,364 458 3,666 616 746 5,418 173 13, 670 429 3,877 871 2,231 791 650 7,453 223 140 4,910 6,530 8,221 13, 820 2,035 10, 724 11, 848 5,741 9,096 21, 307 5,681 1,050 17,229 8,650 2,061 10, 421 12, 369 7,667 16, 448 57, 043 9,745 18,328 9,410 7,920 4,883 3,023 3,707 19, 486 33, 894 17, 286 11, 214 5,250 9,340 16, 626 14, 007 12, 445 5,475 35, 088 5,065 6,790 14, 044 20 156 371 1,498 40 35 310 4 146 233 47 3,105 300 63 90 190 30 378 178 1,169 2 702 138 214 680 425 23 105 10, 550 1,906 2,158 100 668 20,220 295 3,253 14, 688 55 365 129 2,070 784 2,194 130 11, 459 26,464 447 3,155 177 128 2,667 200 4,871 1, /02 7,784 13,169 4,493 143 553 136 646 1,969 10, 465 50 37, 726 90, 976 137, 773 370, 239 27,605 205, 371 292, 020 103, 090 836. 161 393, 948 81, 197 87, 890 263, 507 57, 069 17, 805 110, 672 152, 220 79,064 344, 741 211, 239 134, 550 337, 013 160, 895 78, 917 236. 162 128, 846 641, 708 302, 146 73, 035 317, 137 88,462 304, 540 192, 185 134, 031 107, 614 572, 734 834, 096 189, 286 554, 873 306, 945 2,803 737 6,175 15, Oil 9,054 4,455 3,463 1,210 38,393 18,035 5,967 4,890 5,349 9,303 5,155 8,570 19, 185 46,988 1,045 9,260 9,157 5,825 4,313 10, 598 37,561 31, 188 20 15, 978 4,374 9,924 2,000 2,325 1,047 57, 260 76, 905 345 49, 395 11,435 1,778 819 7,743 24,343 3,017 10, 757 19, 318 3,243 39,792 29, 465 2,734 4,181 12,407 244 364 6,780 5,498 4,212 23, 572 11, 593 901 26, 278 8,274 5,314 7,867 12,762 36,104 34, 137 1,807 13, 659 4,134 28,826 5,683 3,435 2,259 39, 489 75, 343 1,163 29,698 16, 979 25 9 16 105 8 6 61 64 1,313 204 1 455 17 9 27 13 238 634 176 550 2 108 635 21 2 2 337 595 597 1 35 127 203 165 941 3,040 5 2,683 1,323 405 4,138 3,883 140 321 431 6 30 436 500 482 1,103 88 306 3,222 1,096 273 1,085 1,630 1,272 1,679 18 1,092 620 5,414 321 813 668 1,441 2,537 52 791 1,481 97 7 104 12 40 15 4 26 33 167 2 10 6S 57 60 36 38 342 144 23 5 6 41 33 40 19 Total.. 1, 086, 338 1, 136, 323 387, 027 28, 053, 551 1, 848, 557 1, 774, 554 18, 831 191, 273 7,254 STATE OF ILLINOIS, 37 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. ft a S S 1 102 20 195 15 158 582 20 1,445 250 146 40 100 8 16 30 100 50 200 2 705 927 238 434 745 10 130 100 15 191 91 140 3 1 510 21? 100 37 53 5 10 49 4 16 5 1,563 8 4 140 2 6 4 56 12 65 200 30 65 50 3,768 745 100 120 1,355 932 485 1,525 640 256 712 810 6,586 1,289 750 6,376 915 1,836 16,167 760 200 4,235 770 290 2,986 250 a 2 105 5 5 142 91 147 •5 206 45 15 35 378 126 35 220 380 3,095 4,353 124 450 664 20 1,826 204 3,430 20, 318 4,659 1,779 11, 491 7,108 12, 784 898 2,531 3,076 1,414 170 4,014 1,313 7,775 9,095 178 4,876 355 20, 987 463 20,835 5,745 4,344 1,814 258 15,463 37, 168 4,845 35,760 6,855 8,043 811 9,465 1,402 3,603 165 235 490 653 10 565 907 542 565 701 115 719 733 17 123 394 187 75 593 778 466 497 570 440 1,107 147 220 967 616 2,175 203 238 1,432 877 275 591 684 313 407 301 5,345 5,743 11, 357 16, 485 50 13, 397 8,605 11, 491 13, 438 21, 339 4,549 2,721 12, 792 420 4,682 13, 168 5,809 6,913 12, 401 7,872 5,907 30, 722 14, 066 7,793 27, 837 2,946 7,768 16, 318 11, 112 34, 315 6,977 18,655 13, 937 25, 577 8,750 15, 374 17, 619 6,150 12,133 11, 865 a ^ s a $1,507 24, 007 27, 100 16, 512 9,753 4,733 8,959 1,319 1,260 4,405 320 10, 408 9,998 356 124 4,148 9,504 3,349 21, 103 44, 670 5,115 6,004 890 19, 650 653 1,277 3,042 15,262 16, 052 8,229 4,252 7,884 23,000 21, 910 3,313 679 76, 043 1,082 16,622 105,335 54,198 81, 849 103, 144 15, 813 172, 138 658,252 45, 605 216, 164 298, 957 60,323 403, 136 57, 731 17, 347 47,388 124, 001 €0, 893 147, 236 225,445 99,4)9 579, 160 161, 600 202, 973 69, 490 122, 319 183, 801 320, 930 83,381 183, 515 71, 047 127, 426 117, 536 94, 401 141, 916 122, 752 173, 736 137, 508 114, 151 124,254 63 64 65 66 6T 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 93 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 51 1,208 48,235 8,670 134, 195 20, 048 56, 730 1, 346, 803 923,220 15,032,433 38 STATE OF INDIANA. AGRICULTURE. 00UNTIE8. ACRES OF LAND. I 3 ■3 a !■ P4 LIVE STOCK. i I 1^ a 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 Adams Allen Bartholomew . Benton Blackford BooAe Brown Carroll Casa Clark Clay Clinton Crawford BavieBB Bearlroru Decatur DeKalb Delaware Dubois Elkhart Fayette Floyd Fountain Franklin Fulton Gibson Grant , Green i, Hamilton Hancock HorrlBoa Hendricks.... Henry Howard Huntington.... Jackson Jasper Jay Jefferson Jennings Johnson Knox KosciuBko La Grange Lake Laporte Lawrence 48,359 108, 675 111, 093 15, 649 20, 376 92,835 33, 791 84,502 81,005 91, 793 64,719 87,388 41,813 99, 400 102, 198 123,973 66, 656 97, 449 58,279 118,362 84,257 34, 967 105, 351 180, 125 59, 469 100, 066 72,846 108, 200 100, 537 80, 880 104, 821 149, 018 117, 531 55, 373 62, 394 114, 704 48, 780 61, 470 109, 028 68,943 99, 143 73, 321 83, 705 79, 857 62, 066 129,434 156, 812 60, 902 147, 908 103, 861 31, 342 '34,229 119,086 77,391 94, 436 101, 626 87, 503 88,131 113, 003 99, 203 119, 963 82, 658 68,377 85, 271 105, 560 138, 008 117, 454 50, 260 34, 900 99, 430 106, 872 95,219 144, 129 47,760 171, 687 94, 342 86, 170 119, 437 54,488 94, 946 71,876 84, 613 119, 335 27,344 88, 482 99,830 81, 476 63, 941 106, 430 126, 551 79, 073 74, 141 87, 190 110, 434 $1, 657, 480 5, 270, 388 5, 632, 880 1, 211, 466 757, 340 4, 563, 114 900, 783 4, 413, 332 4, 433, 050 4, 388, 631 2, 469, 134 4, 595, 945 954, 283 2, 792, 551 5, 457, 900 6, 656, 198 2, 980, 858 5, 044, 006 1, 319, 575 6, 504, 577 5, 898, Oil 1, 745, 483 4, 539, 201 5,656,614 2, 340, 200 3,981,697 3, 104, 998 3, 196, 695 5, 647, 278 4, 031, 219 2, 918, 010 4, 771, 120 6, 893, 320 2, 514, 795 3, 405, 861 4, 336, 566 1, 103, 119 2, 600, 610 4, 870, 570 2, 003, 454 6, 245, 805 2, 316, 234 4, 084, 327 3, 667, 472 2, 057, 788 6, 415, 512 3, 846, 524 $69, 645 107, 248 133, 186 12, 184 19, 596 133, 143 37, 314 185,996 135,276 110, 103 86, 681 103, 624 41,769 111, 190 169, 843 174, 496 86, 313 147, 646 93, 906 184, 258 151, 280 51, 695 149, 890 156,889 83, 116 168,727 99, 615 111,766 173, 078 105, 338 133, 834 131, 529 189, 785 84, 047 104, 255 138, 762 36, 075 74,044 135, 968 57, 597 153, 252 102, 613 132, 199 111, 993 85, 316 148, 480 113, 847 3,213 6,572 5,851 1,899 1,557 7,081 1,533 4,698 5,254 4,649 3,594 5,047 1,902 4,529 4,982 6,123 3,672 5,724 3,410 5,476 5,007 1,762 5,965 6,134 3,394 5,159 3,876 5,415 6,615 4,534 5,154 6,856 6,805 3,586 3,913 5,563 1,800 3,728 6,375 3,490 6,413 4,362 4,597 3,523 2,515 4,502 5,072 25 53 525 58 39 437 154 40 59 243 150 120 75 336 221 704 5 22 60 12 170 47 227 137 95 303 35 149 138 91 229 509 100 56 34 506 30 133 208 305 420 294 8 11 49 105 1.032 3,148 463 7,292 1,238 4,901 595 1,309 97 1,407 89 4,631 465 1,557 634 4,498 274 4,955 439 4,274 508 3,250 725 4,888 248 1,791 703 4,168 1,030 4,567 685 4,542 563 4,397 975 4,608 330 3,404 1,406 6,077 855 2,918 77 1,759 844 4,508 199 5,604 503 929 918 4,508 1,263 3,449 256 5,101 1,748 5,183 276 3,627 194 4,481 570 4,585 383 4,962 459 3,121 449 3,633 306 4,943 934 2,270 308 3,456 631 5,412 700 4,066 771 4,100 212 3,741 476 5,221 1,181 3,799 795 4,645 789 4,339 801 4,132 990 4,014 10, 876 7,012 4,959 2,572 6,753 2,351 6,100 7,713 5,612 5,060 6,215 2,445 8,134 4,862 8,192 7,114 7,322 5,971 7,909 5,464 1,755 7,074 5,496 5,986 6,642 4,855 8,995 5,768 10,691 8,055 4,185 5,711 6,207 5,575 4,536 6,775 5,929 6,399 8,137 9,088 6,209 6,010 6,352 9,137 8,546 15,361 10, 666 3,849 4,720 14, 108 5,669 13,049 12, 5.51 13, 952 6,056 14,026 5,906 10, 746 18,264 14,820 8,460 16,082 7,315 2,793 15,070 8,083 8,412 12,004 13, 885 15,402 13, 2^ 12,568 12,361 16,404 12,125 8,739 12,237 11,722 3,524 10,841 14, 169 11,716 11,775 12,611 17, 039 20,425 1,702 6,022 15.722 STATE OF INDIANA. 39 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. a .a s » E"s ^ -E ® « .3 S " 15 476 31,371 ~ 50,420 7,212 10, 5K 42,353 e/ 146, 009 30,368 29,266 30,239 27,580 39, 160 11,606 32,284 18,468 42,783 18, 917 33,375 25,596 16,540 35,506 7,970 37,903 34,567 17,553 53,437 27,255 44,376 42,238 32,165 27,551 36,972 31,495 24,264 25,137 41,123 5,251 22,864 24,923 31,163 4 5, 473 - 32,168 27,622 13,800 5,235 11,931 38,712 $302, 950 612, 836 772,765 262, 698 10,531 784,494 176, 236 595, 074 611,227 585, 665 475, 945 698, 479 276,783 513, 408 573,584 915, 943 413,035 669, 962 357,461 637,031 650,539 213, 461 791,606 672,249 403, 816 775, 216 410, 486 687, 431 830,923 517, 895 537, 792 902,108 827,108 373,847 443,867 702,622 270, 630 389, 117 725,237 347, 739 859,074 475, 164 65S, 438 478,262 359,830 523,706 802,791 105, 701 223,^2 341, 265 5,536 153, 410 135,098 56, 410 282,77 1 295,818 164, 407 109, 857 201, 746 57,552 130, 797 213, 345 _ 334,696 154,083 218, 537 83,440 — 370, 776 202,163 54,761 1^ 981,4^ 303,778 137,134 P 248,556 15;, 783 141, 919 238,760 163, 170 287,877 140,706 273, 361 122,962 167,225 168, 769 24,287 90,675 167,996 150, 826 I* 262, 383 135,155 249, B99 ^^,386 67, 579 v/- 430, 104 119,393 8,836 14,238 3,099 1,534 350 974 4,812 2,460 1,625 4,043 2,279 1,152 1,372 613 14, 450 4,163 9,259 1,802 1,528 4,500 887 3,392 8,189 7,457 3.062 560 584 2,786 489 2,049 7,016 1,338 595 840 1,850 3,017 1,602 4,271 8,182 1,951 3,005 2,998 3,696 12,228 3,306 772 12, 181 244. 945 652,235 -k, 412, 285 346,888 174, 665 —1, 031, 016 320, 496 793, 591 787,833 661, 713 636, 668 ^ 3, 102, 005 211, 373 822. 946 682, 407 1, 114, 324 94, 749 935, 936 297,663 621,281 895, 948 144, 864 — 1,394,856 1, 041,116 396, 140 -1 1, 441, 095 690,677 957, 167 —-1,326.171 798, 855 479, 470 ^1, 157, 305 — 1, 025, 818 764,739 539, 561 -J-l, 177, 815 354, 915 404, 616 555, 691 373, 896 — 1, 331, 522 877, 188 701, 868 472, 847 283, 420 751, 140 811, 134 51, 037 124,068 105, 774 8,871 12, 850 58, 198 29, 325 96, 357 50, 250 98,286 19,100 67, 319 15, 568 19, 596 60,422 88, 353 74, 991 53, 903 39, 843 83, 451 54 842 3i,re2 63,003 121, 744 14, 908 32, 882 56,648 24,792 70, 737 62,074 65,233 96, 246 12^219 32, 921 61, 503 106, 757 18, 071 38,397 69, 671 42, 755 65,089 17,363 56, 580 54,865 111, 029 84, 172 98, 614 41, 411 4,010 17, 136 400 4,401 47, 749 170, 715 5,877 4,150 20,900 17, 492 4,000 312,064 56, 908 465 9,250 300 6,250 420, 472 120 3,600 1,975 12, 121 4,860 12, 465 132, 892 18, 782 457, 051 114, 487 69, 432 3,494 13. 274 36, 705 21, 848 33, 955 23,597 590 15, 767 17, 266 8,295 32,108 32 1,678 193 2,791 1,200 8, .512 21, 157 40, 341 26, 494 5,664 10,825 38,189 10,647 36,625 31,927 17, 708 21, 375 37, 594 13, 818 28,488 15, 569 29,392 48,267 43, 017 16,238 42,155 31, 315 7,312 48, 968 26,083 20, 565 32,145 34,736 35, 109 34,326 25, 918 27,383 39, 650 38,459 20,774 28,480 27,135 7,227 30, 055 30, 138 26, 350 33,511 24,037 42,050 56,478 5,105 15, 451 36, 170 347 270 1,815 386 1,988 737 665 187 965 1,231 33 1,915 497 1,298 1,739 538 535 4,194 76 220 551 1,524 1,353 40 231 777 820 1,064 343 2,417 583 418 931 91 1,816 451 691 1,952 704 2,766 267 446 1,171 1,022 199 641 38,185 155,029 30,588 2,949 13,428 41, 903 15,269 57, 467 83, 062 33,689 38,399 63,450 13,315 25,535 57,780 31,442 78,288 41,532 18, 876 123,909 18,164 54,205 45, 860 42,452 53,813 23,242 34, 293 22,498 60,253 23,758 85,233 35,392 29,333 45, 021 6,417 23,392 15, 143 41,097 48, 991 35,341 16, 238 17,387 82, 901 92,232 46,320 97, 995 11,424 190 683 5,697 178 2,326 1,414 2,377 3,064 10, 960 2,156 2,622 1,814 3,187 2,277 4,052 197 1,374 647 336 5,209 6,929 3,523 2,702 634 5,237 1,990 3,775 3,963 3,051 6,453 6,860 6,542 4,634 1,428 3,819 8 1,161 2,240 2,120 5,279 4,931 1,129 191 76 2,364 3,599 35 36 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 40 STATE OF INDIANA, AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. Adams Allen Bartholomew. Benton Blackford Boone Brown Carroll Cass Clark Clay.. Clinton Crawford Daviess Dearborn , Decatur DeKalb Delaware Dubois Elkhart Fayetto Floyd , Fountain Franklin Fulton Gibson Grant Green Ilamiltou Hancock IlaiTison Hendricks Heni'y Howard Huntington 'Jackson Jasper Jay Jefferson Jennings Johnson Knox Kosciusko La Grange Lake Laporto Lawrence PRODUCED. 399 1,397 7,053 850 2,126 239 1,574 2,146 1,210 1,612 1,769 301 32, 253 665 1,476 4,040 4,906 .23 4,011 462 365 19, 992 362 898 410 178 1,228 3,551 283 135 6,741 1,732 1,723 271 104 1,040 26, 228 2,362 1,617 1,879 2,008 637 1,929 6,C41 40 I « 11, 162 16,626 2,780 716 5,318 4,511 2,063 5,063 8,136 634 2,811 7,302 18 1,471 2,901 4,862 14, 058 9,630 339 2,138 1,322 141 3,847 4,607 9,394 1,964 7,875 2,040 5,367 6,841 59 1,643 9,400 2,151 8,275 1,196 824 11,510 1,661 1,876 4,025 676 9,398 7,638 5,003 6,546 242 26, 590 8,382 296 2,714 19, 860 1,711 27,022 27, 041 15, 441 16,763 19, 447 3,996 5,893 5,474 728 12,647 17, 148 6,114 30, 837 9,828 10, 493 30, 190 9,048 6,987 33, 519 16, 051 8,696 23,272 18, 968 14,053 21,568 38,836 5,403 10, 794 1,581 2,217 8,602 10, 541 1,902 25, 548 9,703 19, 325 16, 116 3,526 17, 957 5,925 .a 459 216 18 346 251 82 10 19, 111 175 715 59 26, 572 177 27 220 15 151 162 1,533 20 5,392 260 je a 2,760 27 654 2 525 5,130 117 41 6 1,373 16 260 59 $25 6,350 128 3,684 587 13,423 1,594 13, 880 179 3,721 11, 814 3,176 331 790 812 17 7,938 40,226 3,147 25,980 3,329 4,460 150 885 915 100 738 413 32 1,390 5,648 4,239 261 12, 278 349 1,382 1,730 316 2,632 154 3,207 100 N 206, 802 406, 994 319, 840 6,350 103, 053 249, 733 57, 016 389, 412 365, 410 254, 447 213, 404 210, 880 57, 097 80,543 257, 258 278, 261 334, Oil 233,371 62, 841 389, 833 213, 038 87, 168 154, 661 290, 600 162, 980 227, 605 185, 666 139, 581 290, 843 226, 573 162, 544 233, 335 382, 846 109,241 215, 941 279, 996 61,279 206, 988 6,921 120,263 257, 527 109, 153 328, 128 249,926 337, 115 318, 575 176, 813 7,533 6,944 5,354 46, 059 5,477 516 1,041 2,440 1,750 3,696 3,456 90 8,220 11, 051 8,222 40, 279 9,227 530 18, 206 8,060 400 8,214 5,780 8,429 2,362 4,237 5,532 7,737 1,282 54 4,641 6,020 360 3,210 3,982 8,522 6,231 10, 643 1,659 8,197 250 3,789 15,168 32, 864 19, 665 3,327 a 9,257 17, 286 5,568 1,073 2,256 6,892 1,534 5,651 9,963 5,877 4,642 7,290 1,797 4,763 14,495 8,007 12,340 6,289 2,639 15, 112 8,102 3,560 7,587 6,652 11, 107 5,802 4,575 4,679 6,360 3,765 3,270 6,099 6,592 3,464 6,863 4,936 9,354 5,217 13 5,300 5,177 4,317 10, 722 13, 166 24,986 12, 635 4,114 13 ,.. 607 2,186 272 55 42 603 1,004 8 154 313 3 85 48 1,204 3,658 198 3 6,665 254 57 143 805 429 83 189 281 335 1,111 186 544 132 991 44 56 50 L 13 151 151 3,157 4,859 251 111 340 285 103 268 818 208 757 481 457 332 172 79 129 384 247 590 46 37 308 123 568 543 203 180 531 489 321 284 135 370 551 150 155 111 145 504 1,075 124 462 163 242 227 679 84 1,460 19 209 120 135 59 63 124 415 8 23 29 1,505 164 13 36 158 2,328 169 14 23 23 14 5 4 31 7 16 4 30 173 244 73 91 10 38 STATE OF INDIANA. 41 AGRICULTURE. PRODUUKD. ■s 4 1 ■i s •a HEMP. ■s E ■s 3 1 DQ 1 P> o o o u s 1 o h 1 ■s If ||. §°" O t 1 = 11 1 h OS Q at a o •d" Is ! Pi o 369 53 1,221 65 435 13,493 34,477 6,945 1,540 1,040 3,843 2,269 8,620 5,711 887 1,952 151 16,442 28,128 6,788 775 18, 507 32,277 4,594 19,258 19, 127 11,298 10,046 27, 292 2,523 5,711 2,480 9,340 1,231 20, 120 612 4,622 7,687 1,135 21,874 6,885 21,236 18, 711 18, 742 15, 069 IP, 843 11, 868 5,583 15, 960 16, 519 25,063 16, 602 12, 637 5,895 22, 644 17, 457 5,595 15, 804 9,622 22, 732 19,912 11, 697 9,327 11,825 $7, 785 6,113 9,684 $64,023 166, 407 119,703 2,062 30, 812 116,254 39,378 152,599 183,038 212, 285 86, 384 91, 397 50, 110 130, 951 154, 007 100, 133 83, 970 168, 785 68, 519 122,600 100, 774 45,531 127, 101 137, 341 82,385 196, 445 87, 761 99, 529 116, 100 70, 397 121,216 92, 578 128, 919 68,953 96,083 206, 861 30,881 66,581 131, 738 77,569 120, 340 112, 513 125, 667 74, 867 59, 219 84,293 224,545 1 250 2 5 3 4 3,138 1,996 3,465 73 77 500 1,218 337 3,8-15 918 2,921 388 79 2,951 223 3 106 7,837 69 97 40 71 200 9,915 10 1 935 6 254 1,105 37 161 4,685 127 1,299 3,096 101 320 14, 698 425 2,804 73 063 16,755 603 67 467 10,223 27,822 9,045 23,719 14,735 9,509 10, 971 24,512 6,402 2,407 1,436 11,397 68,257 15,628 2,048 128, 556 946 346 44, 324 6,579 14, 781 14,426 33, 687 4,995 20, 654 5,504 1,315 13,003 34,571 30, 117 30,831 6,395 1,478 6,036 1,503 2,972 3,598 2,349 1,233 3,484 1,851 275 1,153 3,454 1,652 1,851 346 6,038 5,283 1,437 3,011 5,293 1,461 1,834 905 2,327 4,098 1,404 1,259 2,726 11,781 2,054 1,997 881 1,471 30, 996 9,467 8,642 11, 386 2,453 19, 916 11,384 3,413 10, 767 2,012 5,731 3,744 13, 636 2,914 9,150 8,923 287 8,274 4,063 15, 042 9,267 17, 563 20, 302 27, 739 10, 998 8,098 19, 718 8,271 16,247 11, 483 4,206 8,740 10, 260 5,316 2,236 23,065 1,983 18, 506 13, 156 2,673 4,695 7,207 755 889 80 462 1,074 84 318 356 11 94 29 568 762 329 30 65 86 30 861 89 735 336 809 538 194 146 87 536 404 324 323 180 40 250 297 61 311 06 1,114 1,377 559 307 214 6, 663 20, 850 7,493 10, 616 6,350 10,895 12, 501 12, 890 9,086 19, 127 1,523 10, 789 6,787 14,581 3,795 3,835 998 1,833 ■8,326 2,913 5,087 27, 912 12, 539 19, 478 13, 706 10, 175 13, 874 16, 808 6,214 10, 182 8,8.38 15, 314 2,516 15, 334 12, 736 12, 109 14, 187 8,894 11,429 2,330 023 601 10, 807 5 6 7 S 9 10 8 n 70 12 5 13 14 15 105 515 1,125 3 10 66 220 492 473 707 167 241 1,525 265 190 1,097 722 155 956 242 1,119 15, 080 4,447 15, 080 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 50 74 04 23 1 28 29 30 3 1,000 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 500 25, 733 5,021 3,052 11,292 14, 004 50, 657 28,392 125 17, 818 15, 622 2,075 2,565 63J 3,830 1,314 2,970 1,192 38 39 40 5 290 41 42 21 138 307 240 671 102 5 43 44 45 702 3,337 4G 5 57 47 ^ 6 ~ 42 STATE OF INDIANA. AGRICULTUKE. COUNTIES. ACKES OF LAKD. a S oi a "S » a o 3 i > Or LIVE STOCK. 1^ Madisou Marion Marshall Martin Miami Monroe Montgomery.. Morgan Newton Noble Ohio Orange Owen Parke Perry Pike Porter Po8ey PnluBki Putnam Randolph Ripley Rush St. Joseph Scott Shelby Spencer Stark Steuben Sullivan Switzerland . . Tippecanoe... Tipton Union Vanderburgh . Vermillion Vigo Wabash Warren Warrick Washington - . Wayne AVclIs White Whitley Total . 109, 664 133, 221 29,231 44, 102 85, 723 125, 392 206, 922 142, 092 27, 441 69, 285 31,284 95, 752 136, 355 108, 843 37, 134 60, 167 73, 123 79, 712 41, 306 245, 817 114, 104 98, 990 145, 568 88, 256 45, 056 130, 013 72, 801 9,541 66, 365 91, 967 77, 485 169, 912 42, 431 59, 886 50, 850 67, 017 95, 737 100,099 120, 068 78, 223 143, 819 152,009 57, 642 84, 992 55, 374 97,722 93, 381 40, 385 83, 567 95, 959 77, 397 117, 404 113, 343 39,048 93, 190 27,114 108, 504 82, 597 115, 113 93, 974 89, 236 56, 819 79, 534 54, 077 49, 934 120, 077 117,487 108, 255 90, 503 50, 744 107, 581 111, 840 30, 847 86, 336 102, 073 51, 214 130, 074 71, 196 41,806 46, 999 86, 599 90, 315 110, 064 75,986 109, 035 144, 926 115, 454 74, 950 89, 481 76, 402 8, 242, 183 8, 146, 109 $5, 061, 358 10, 923, 439 1, 692, 420 1,137,620 4, 470, 525 3,054,156 7, 807, 182 5, 767, 548 964, 571 3, 242, 207 2, 026, 760 2, 458, 913 3, 530, 527 5, 081, 953 1, 098, 473 1, 656, 220 3, 307, 780 3, 786, 096 1,065.376 7,755,634 5, 852, 796 3, 702, 062 10, 266, 641 4, 216, 875 1, 176, 590 7, 790, 350 2, 796, 195 411, 650 2, 426, 995 2, 548, 305 4, 508, 776 8, 257, 600 2, 026, 633 4, 356, 027 1, 912, 594 2, 477, 892 3, 958, 905 4, 913, 676 3, 915, 395 3, 066, 049 4, 283, 381 11, 583, 148 2, 393, 249 2, 864, 063 2, 921, 596 $143, 221 219, 976 36, 503 47,262 137, 817 95,673 297, 606 138, 935 23, 692 97, 306 19, 786 95,548 112,537 154, 013 37,218 78, 781 85, 615 47, 954 33, 746 183, 021 161, 692 119, 642 222, 793 131, 434 42, 711 199, 049 107, 490 15, 245 82, 715 107, 723 133, 965 198, 864 46, 879 143, 129 54,582 92, 846 114, 459 159, 729 102, 453 103,017 175, 839 309,023 68, 794 79, 606 77, 611 4,359 7,186 1,518 2,053 5,104 5,400 10, 133 6,356 1,236 3,398 1,465 3,995 5,459 6,399 1,831 3,365 2,855 4,207 1,617 8,635 6,628 5,354 8,566 4,268 2,399 ■/ 7, 62J' '/''7,62j"v\n 107, 489 395 3,116 4,880 3,578 9,059 2,395 3,686 2,283 4,265 5,543 6,140 5,333 3,811 6,297 8,327 3,531 3,058 3,198 356, 712, 175 10, 457, 897 520, 677 57 301 864 444 70 21 111 538 155 496 30 133 22 355 51 1,308 77 326 363 73 176 249 293 10 9 200 138 323 45 135 454 96 269 81 207 447 596 105 55 122 126 28,893 4,050 6,093 1,603 1,927 4,922 3,979 7,066 4,625 1,285 4,286 1,099 3,079 4,356 4,460 2,200 2,655 3,909 3,490 2,625 6,122 5,990 5,489 5,490 4,516 2,071 5,388 3,167 847 4,188 3,943 2,924 6,828 2,369 2,646 2,595 3,074 4,264 5,838 4,401 3,248 5,047 6,572 3,398 3,741 3,532 363, 553 410 374 441 937 432 685 418 559 265 873 65 693 867 637 1,063 1,257 718 875 817 893 535 1,511 268 772 217 316 1,637 512 1,204 557. ^ 463 314 3,383 16 414 219 434 625 186 1,638 829 157 379 714 733 6,376 7,354 3,119 4,238 8,390 7,395 14, 184 9,221 3,230 6,741 1, 515' 5,191 8,072 8,353 2,478 3,742 5,468 5,548 3,827 13, 578 6,990 7,325 12, 074 6,486 2,896 7,105 4,369 1,082 .5, 695 8,568 2,788 13,579 4,941 . 3, 603 2,205 5,280 6,960 8,409 11,563 5,212 8,115 11,511 4,190 8,010 5,123 11,634 10, 933 3,323 8,08! 14, 717 13,992 21,924 15,072 1,6 15, 699 3,583 13,874 15,710 18, 516 5,070 9,019 5,584 7,802 3,921 19,359 14, 365 12,160 15,588 7,936 2,975 11,341 7,511 505 16, 631 15,425 5,766 12,433 6,639 3,737 2,879 8,355 9,991 16, 018 7,699 9,406 16, 337 12,094 10,291 9,904 10,583 588,144 991, 175 STATE OF INDIANA. 4a AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. > » g-s »o « - & a « o o S -I .S ° o ,0 » I CO 9. "«■ 38,808 47, 032 8,45f 13, 975 29,077 34,14S 52,317 64,968 5,691 20, 936 7,246 29,366 47,720 44, 790 15, 184 31,825 12,040 33,107 7,319 62,005 38,592 25,479 ■ 75,684 16, 123 13, 616 47j676 24, 496 2,535 7,896 28,836 13,979 36,779 19,485 27,592 9,697 17,587 30,891 35, 695 21,285 26, 113 37,385 49,877 25,787 12,479 17, 387 $592, 402 975,461 167, 942 280, 576 567,322 617, 916 1,225,862 934, 987 182,783 428,949 143, 177 514, 353 572,741 788, 475 222,650 413,491. 417,486 407, 131 218,698 1, 453, 638 739, 910 589, 805 1, 178, 960 443, 176 282,261 979, 394 473, 153 76,538 452, 116 556,967 468, 768" 1, 126, 764 334,348 509,743 296,738 490,569 638,243 711, 595 735, 715 519, 780 894, 141 1, 145, 864 367, 262 461, 186 390, 452 200,112 -331, 165 94,878 61, 945 274,046 109,571 264,340 178, 997 11, 573 205,262 100,400 110, 571 182,155 263,637 54, 303 108,386 149, 151 199, 427 59, 967 140, 191 154, 208 305, 161 — 371, 885 ■^ 362,870 67,778 — 359,999 134, 763 9,314 133,953 135, 269 181, 889 /^225,-728 50,681 127,128 83, 684 108,875 179, 159 289, 576 58,441 151, 684 221, 994 ■"=^344,131 132, 916 68,033 141, 835 751 2,106 1,113 913 3,261 2,765 6,934 4,342 227 7,761 4,227 7,931 31, 711 4,843 392- 283 3,762 57 3,455 18,646 4,113 17,268 4,620 4,565 843 1,553 1,070 2,479 19,900 1,622 9,818 47, 450 565 647 630 11, 652 2,747 2,724 2,278 92 7,062 841 4,911 4,190 3,093 — 1,108,087 _1 1,545,690 278,619 318,021 808, 997 668,094 ~i 1,554,705 1,660,056 158,255 471, 650 293,751 433,983 989, 450 1, 354, 070 286, 754 616, 183 404, 665 — 1,039,211 225,102 -1 1,754,839 880, 944 428, 948 -J 1,847,065 573, 074 22.3, 226 -I 1,749,752 669, 256 55,988 334,288 850, 545 422, 986 j^, 384, 400 530, 121 655, 625 429,405 — 1, 060, 983 - 1, 284, 532 990,869 — 1,221,195 610,854 731, 706 _ 1,387,262 423, 026 578, 638 410, 307 42,369 110, 621 15, 657 25,230 59, 711 68,087 118, 148 76, 618 9,524 81, 691 7,107 74,843 62, 571 50, 375 16, 551 19, 374 73, 944 26, 847 8,207 123, 478 120, 700 58,047 136, 682 57, 137 32. 172 72, 323 34,511 773 36, 615 9,693 12,858 68, 694 15, 672 64,826 15,482 37, 936 25,197 80. 173 36, 129 22,196 162, 908 202,194 49, 439 14, 477 42, 786 42, 125 6,380 200 150, 689 16, 748 13, 782 17, 194 16,594 1,820 630 38, 590 73, 080 14, 879 136, 031 717, 426 3,570 2,496 10, 763 27, 920 6,590 330 18, 056 170, 250 1, 145, 09p 595 2,210 950 2,075 6,833 5,120 12, 430 71,023 510 9,494 41, 292 450 1, 731, 833 81, 945 181, 985 9,110 5,351 2,009 31,229 28, 083 10, 446 16,776 33,788 29, 947 88,067 36,850 4,956 31, 725 33, 736 53, 426 10, 074 910 18, 950 12, 117 9,761 55, 644 43, 600 26, 351 30, 077 22,514 19, 964 30,913 15, 062 1,324 52, 564 32,605 17, 367 49,424 13,829 15, 184 5,716 23,260 21, 063 40, 419 25,777 17, 915 42, 569 36, 095 25, 474 33, 372 23, 993 1,021 2,770 294 261 457 1,987 2,493 1,486 770 216 1,099 349 6.36 258 733 1,055 723 2 524 , 2,915 828 2,511 34 365 662 840 1,798 145 927 175 1,179 1,089 89 96 184 883 3,253 676 46 287 1,465 336 319 648 202 38,383 139, 213 29, 907 11, 215 81,898 15, 162 40, 259 28, 505 1,036 86,223 22, 009 8,508 20, 661 29, 511 35, 424 12,282 48, 907 29, 877 34, 311 34, 603 42, 728 45, 839 28, 304 90,309 11, 164 35, 167 50,257 10, 999 80, 863 18, 607 65, 907 93,936 29, 116 6,099 24, 106 24, 677 44, 390 84, 265 27,202 19, 361 18, 592 47, 796 58, 571 42, 728 59,281 2,3.37 15, 107 604 1,573 2,681 2,141 5,980 6,126 471 22,013 3,074 3,669 7,043 875 2,113 34 1,045 328 7,269 2,986 2,976 4,268 1,936 2,465 5,113 4,884 117 95 6,925 1,951 2,756 1,345 1,030 1,773 1,326 5,611 2,499 876 9,606 4,783 15, 124 679 397 1,116 3, 099, 110 41, 855, 539 16, 848, 267 463, 495 71, 588, 919 5, 317, 831 7, 993, 378 2, 553, 318 79, 902 3, 866, 647 299,516 44 STATE OF INDIANA, AGEICULTURE. COUNTIES. Madison Marion Marshall Martin Miami Monroe Montgomery . . Morgan Newton Noble Ohio Orango Owen Parlte PeiTy Piko Porter Posey Pulaski Putnam Randolph Ripley Rush St. Joseph Scott Shelby Spencer Stark Steuben Sullivan Switzerland .. Tippecanoe... Tipton Union Vanderburgh . Yermillion Vigo Wabash Warren Warrick Washington . . Wayne Wells White AVhillcy PRODUCED. 2,673 3,753 650 127 4,290 208 5,241 223 1,580 79 678 4,181 993 1,710 5,942 153 . : 256 6,022 5,609 2,269 6,317 584 18, 987 10, 6C2 Total . 745 49 6,473 3,501 75 11, 563 18, 826 831 3,273 4,234 226 60 83 18,133 2,770 81 563 .a I a 9,045 5,076 3,666 744 5,845 569 3,492 2,908 13, 578 1,203 5 2,557 1,450 398 83 4,425 564 5,120 783 10, 066 3,129 1,239 5,857 103 6,373 767 2,413 14, 107 690 2,579 10, 172 2,365 1,974 375 4,800 2,175 6,764 5,546 40 135 3,887 11,352 11,378 9, 132 $16, 627 48, 175 8,150 1,473 18, 000 10, 673 37, 766 19, 942 15, 889 2,792 8,384 10, 975 21, 175 6,533 7,313 11, 204 9,186 686 30,553 20, 280 9,008 30, 840 22, 491 1,888 22,227 13, 296 343 14, 851 16, 318 6,851 29, 400 1,596 4,991 9,046 7,549 11, 284 20, 118 12, 376 14,421 17, 168 29, 643 5,456 3,596 7,088 382, 245 396, 989 1, 258, 942 20 81 39 580 224 133 25 1,661 2,051 40 665 388 10 1,499 816 4,314 59 42 10, 396 6 410 21 8 23 1,476 6 20 20 102, 895 $3, 235 41, 395 3,578 3,950 617 252 4,716 1,060 2,477 2,588 1,374 411 2,633 1,560 101,311 1,480 566 3 1,094 619 190 6,827 8,913 64 800 280 199 1,140 310 7,795 9,960 130 4,321 5,139 9,691 9,454 1,352 160 325 12, 383 9,820 370 100 546, 153 n 222, 945 361, 140 73, 377 84, 773 227, 453 195, 470 375, 434 230, 026 258, 515 90, 267 142, 123 148, 720 181, 163 46, 668 1,085 199, 265 92, 735 81, 496 356, 180 374, 888 210, 444 335, 143 245, 601 80, 451 250, 678 104, 688 27, 496 265, 636 160, 403 195, 547 233, 046 163, 842 173, 103 69, 937 130, 935 170, 684 343, 208 13.i, 385 106, 699 357, 953 378, 858 199, 660 129, 630 194, 028 1,433 3,170 4,387 100 2,483 4,598 17, 037 13,328 15, 878 3,729 2,923 2,315 12, 661 615 1,911 14, 815 6 889 8,961 8,328 23, 616 3,149 4,476 100 6,790 625 140 24,598 1,313 10, 897 1,754 60 3,140 351 2,882 1,407 10, 195 6,005 285 4,183 7,716 4,406 4,193 2,831 18, 306, 651 605, 795 W 6,145 9,157 3,524 1,377 7,303 4,359 947 4,888 1,131 11, 738 3,466 1,620 4,139 7,371 2,275 1,911 17, 736 3,117 9,006 8,747 7,100 10, 343 7,141 13, 749 2,099 4,948 3,756 3,627 14, 801 4,525 14, 192 9,937 2,425 3,566 4,093 3,851 9,978 8,104 9,270 3,838 7,089 9,204 6,183 10, 356 7,261 623, 426 C5 381 93 772 47 951 193 734 4,277 48 103 167 405 1 161 76 333 103 378 110 43 414 1,844 30 243 11 249 2,056 16 49 67 13 120 35 75 199 1,196 18 33 8 661 283 56 1,467 128 264 241 254 260 1,062 931 556 36 477 1,555 676 344 25 79 318 40 34 627 444 263 1,061 145 136 299 141 5 243 419 1,447 381 78 445 192 157 2,536 332 176 45 1,133 820 210 312 157 60, 726 34, 914 18 123 174 32 214 46 215 191 316 15,777 10 3,200 23 29 57 92 11 15 40 19 33 136 51 27,884 STATE OF INDIANA, 45 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. O 1 t 1 *a < HEMP. "S m § p. o M •3 ■3 'a" a 1 1 = 1 g O 1 o A a t no" a 1 h 1 Pi 1 ■s 1 1 it £ 'a |l i a s § ft 1 ! 1 O 217 4,848 12, 813 2,446 100 14,066 11,737 19, 396 5,295 35, 676 13, 841 39,887 8,481 1,349 4,026 880 183 4,613 3,663 9,879 1,660 10, 399 1.3, 424 7,DC8 8,951 9,825 10, 251 20,299 21,866 555 83 534 17,847 16, 791 11, 355 2,265 17, 145 13,158 63, 231 30,533 $13,908 6,449 4,419 11, 073 11,047 16,291 15, 511 23,459 119, 130 153, 894 3.5, 148 63,287 153, 347 83, 183 152, 563 110,085 48 49 ,50 3,720 1,086 2,085 575 989 1,193 733 68 153 144 13 51 5 403 216 675 492 53 53 54 55 ,56 48,853 1,828 13,661 19, 492 17, 958 1,740 6,559 10, 995 3,234 775 2,090 2, 739 2, 117 57 669 362 67 4,657 177 2,970 17, 040 18,284 1,369 4,107 4,626 168 7,736 16, 604 25, 403 6,554 4,401 7,152 655 20,209 14,029 1,486 6,444 26, 141 592 4,561 12,286 4,623 214 10,394 17,880 20, 315 1,108 956 4,900 26, 018 5,235 8,913 7,740 1,297 136 73 94 515 74 137 40 31, 171 2,922 6,047 6,159 20,383 1,531 6,121 10, 149 3,030 6,763 23,875 19, 339 11, 110 8,089 8,025 680 11,384 7, 871 5,855 23, 894 9,552 11, 343 24,772 19, 988 3,715 818 7,206 7,572 24, 737 14, 197 4,110 27,040 14,471 23,395 12,257 13, 018 5,575 2,673 18,398 17, 049 6,921 4,779 15,338 480 3,547 2,929 19, 184 17, 5.54 12, 270 6.319 1,848 14,829 118, 906 9,453 669 6,656 20,853 12,096 1,886 9,198 20 1,703 8,884 6,847 18, 235 2,965 17,353 18, 709 6,487 9,635 3,470 7,307 100, 635 45, 492 176, 974 74, 653 117,433 63,036 120,596 63, 157 259, 163 29,727 143, 058 115,752 104, 243 166,846 103, 858 39, 668 118, 118 108, 702 10,681 72,247 118, 313 75, 056 297, 138 41, 365 52,287 74, 514 133, 778 143,605 170, 935 73,869 107, 134 182, 658 165, 132 99, 389 63, 068 83,683 57 265 4,392 2,833 399 946 325 1 605 259 4 24 15 58 105 59 60 200 100 61 62 1 2 63 64 65 340 223 575 376 26 464 66 75 1,514 988 2 31, 797 30, 583 5,760 31, 951 53, 0.58 1,099 0,479 19 50 35, 757 17,825 5,267 4,114 7,390 11, 818 3,760 4,287 4,501 9,309 3,780 365 2,441 160 67 68 1,050 120 181 1,930 69 70 25 229 245 128 71 6 ■ 441 55 72 297 131 164 1,783 75 574 928 63 101 40 55 135 1,110 513 38 168 84 972 293 514 73 150 74 75 4 1 1,324 140 480 20 487 49 5 8 1,810 39 4,028 1,855 394 2,001 1,041 841 4,652 76 1 77 78 ■ 79 80 81 82 10,856 7,737 47, 893 1,856 27 10,285 23,760 30,544 625 39,344 355 821 3,563 104 450 2,937 8,163 2,185 135 2,297 83 84 200 607 1,385 3,847 1,257 85 86 87 510 250 2,284 68 84 69 8,374 869 475 714 4 88 89 90 91 92 92 1,355 51 2,816 97, 119 119, 430 575 1, 541, 761 293, 908 881, 049 34, 535 1, 224, 489 986, 393 9,824,204 46 STATE OF IOWA. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. ACRES OF LAND. .9 a ■3 I a ■a S s 'p. t^ LIVE STOCK. ^ .9 Adair Adams Allamakee ... Appanoose .. Audubon ijenton Black Hawk. Soone Bremer Buchanan Buena Vista - Buncombe* . Butler Calhoun Carroll Cedar Cerro Gordo. Cherokee Chickasaw ... Clarke Clay Clayton Clinton Crawford Dallas Davis Decatur Delaware Des Moines.. Dickinson . . . Dubuque Emmett Fayette Floyd Franklin Fremont Greene , Grundy Guthrie Hamilton Hancock Hardin Harrison Henry , Howard Humboldt Ida , Iowa , Jackson Jasper Jefferson Johnson Jones Keokuk Kossuth Lee Linn Louisa Lucas Madison Mahaska 4,069 6,294 50, 366 74, 627 2,881 59, 908 34, 465 23,476 28,490 37, 773 60 16, 760 19,546 133, 607 146, 832 14, 648 84,052 61,568 31, 664 72, 241 83, 568 540 $201, 680 225, 650 1, 722, 740 2, 240, 170 141, 597 1, 903, 648 1, 369, 995 638, 892 1, 031, 330 1, 456, 513 2,400 $7, 662 12, 049 76, 087 106, 549 3,655 80, 374 63,922 31, 373 48, 058 57, 360 90 307 398 1,938 3,803 152 2,645 1,852 1,262 1,490 2,031 1 333 412 2,991 3,504 193 2,693 1,824 1,181 1,587 2,212 5 143 217 1,884 1,316 54 821 536 379 539 660 20, 393 1,038 1,460 9,813 131, 575 4,689 75 19, 265 28,093 208 108, 691 .39, 507 2,383 38,082 87, 909 54, 645 97,034 107, 531 367 109, 038 167 55, 747 21,522 6,506 28, 687 7,227 5,458 18,477 8,237 845 22,593 12,276 114, 270 16,388 1,110 248 43, 192 107, 554 58.773 99, 357 77, 643 96, 977 91,363 1,798 131, 206 115, 867 75, 201 33, 703 44, 172 73,850 43, 573 1,959 4,053 26, 130 105, 431 18,238 538 73, 957 67, 453 902 134, 892 104, 520 7,841 84, 633 140, 978 127, 013 59,426 82,442 1,197 169, 722 863 102, 955 49, 367 16, 617 60, 517 20, 860 12, 961 39, 312 20, 334 2,409 52, 388 41, 837 74, 187 73, 278 2,676 2,137 98, 380 177, 476 103, 698 109, 083 76, 764 131, 105 162, 475 6,870 95, 717 136, 451 53, 974 54, 726 120, 776 97, 019 409, 875 24, 960 28,250 324, 334 3, 691, ,875 176, 285 2,950 562, 685 911, 039 6,000 3, 147, 582 3, 366, 065 57, 430 1, 235, 211 2, 494, 091 1, 556, 970 1, 217, 201 4, 186, 902 9,700 3, 658, 878 2,550 1, 153, 102 773, 012 200, 298 1, 175, 083 168, 557 200, 720 510, 130 313, 375 38, 100 737, 837 29, 010 4, 106, 510 615, 519 18, 730 12, 060 1, 464, 530 3,219,489 2, 046, 716 3, 661, 566 3, 436, 810 a, 552, 933 3, 204, 065 38, 010 5, 115, 505 3,845,263 2, 538, 653 739, 539 617, 460 2, 470, 356 27, 633 715 1,547 15, 527 158, 681 10, 990 250 31, 738 43, 327 400 161, 186 175, 419 3,188 44, 867 119, 621 70, 310 86, 9C3 138, 683 1,030 171, 983 490 87, 571 14, 843 10, 178 40, 543 9,960 10, 935 27, 302 14, 860 2,305 30, 724 25, 596 156, 579 27, 403 755 717 66, 638 162, 213 85, 129 146, 064 92, 647 114, 576 119, 164 1,835 199, 189 151, 223 112, 789 42, 242 77, 212 106,951 " No return. 903 47 68 .550 5,192 248 7 955 1,641 17 3,898 4,655 102 2,031 4,673 3,779 3,471 5,271 7 5,615 5 2,394 944 273 1,532 359 260 928 386 40 1,123 653 3,642 706 39 13 1,965 5,509 3,170 5,908 3,997 4,119 4,451 79 6,147 5,433 2,769 1,735 2,460 3,744 14 2 3 108 2 59 108 1 70 287 73 56 341 2 33 14 231 S 36 115 90 391 105 49 207 282 162 186 86 88 160 1,063 63 70 594 5,390 296 14 1,660 1,356 23 4,774 6,276 163 1,956 4,306 2,691 4,013 5,395 27 6,459 21 3,154 1,054 367 1,802 406 332 743 459 39 1,076 930 4,583 1,256 73 22 2,623 6,538 2,772 5,708 3,869 4,579 4,212 139 6,797 5,483 3,270 1,578 2,308 3,323 344 14 28 229 811 751 10 874 437 16 1,913 1,360 38 548 1,487 1,342 1,349 978 14 1,831 20 1,057 449 166 724 169 97 344 162 30 333 396 1,263 776 21 9 985 1,744 577 1,512 920 1,174 1,554 80 1,446 947 653 614 928 705 543 671 2,943 5,440 299 3,647 2,664 2,493 2,406 3,446 11 1,537 62 132 1,097 7,767 429 28 2,584 2, 659 -40 6,678 7,552 233 3,718 7,375 3,676 6,466 8,291 26 8,864 42 3,882 1,962 507 3,785 553 449 1,329 678 68 1,734 1,305 7,582 1,846 98 30 2,998 9,532 4,934 9,247 7,376 6,339 5,528 203 9,804 9,128 6,373 2,263 4,654 7,808 496 576 1,640 8,241 105 2,601 1,108 3,383 1,6 1,851 537 17 35 427 2,261 145 891 3,508 3,025 1,481 54 4,020 14, 019 6,442 2,685 5,475 2,622 4,000 953 88 2,876 865 176 1,2 228 33 1,960 636 7,312 473 2,238 4,722 3,543 9,902 5,733 3,903 8,870 8,324 7,648 3,778 3,838 4,757 13,726 STATE OF IOWA. 47 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PEODUCED. e%- ■o? 1,753 3,093 12,83* 24,332 518 13, 629 C,695 8,449 5,425 G,413 7 $37, 690 62,247 291,468 504, 890 20, 181 326,732 220, 187 149, 720 170, 371 241, 924 5,600 5,991 8,710 257,063 38,350 9,850 168, 165 103, 297 27, 562 73,256 117, 719 42 199 1,484 2,653 177 65 3,242 374 445 78, 460 129, 715 273, 178 1, 131, 280 23,195 526,506 340, 355 304,375 184, 527 265, 384 700 4,286 4,772 167, 136 53, 074 2,726 135, 617 124, 870 23,950 75, 649 114, 445 15 555 14, 567 9,662 1,857 12, 790 1,506 2,720 1,380 1,529 3,776 25, 083 508 5,633 3,968 7,004 4,281 5,339 201 363 1,007 1,512 38 560 481 1,189 356 448 2 4,475 5,598 73, 006 24, 810 2,71S 43, 915 47,384 18,229 39, 978 42, 198 130 855 1,721 11 60 3 204 3,285 178 314 1,684 19,562 672 9 3,238 12, 124 50 16, 396 14, 560 654 8,400 S9, 146 25,540 11, 174 31,279 46 15, 266 27 6,592 4,435 910 10, 796 2, 465 1,041 5,859 901 70 5,611 6,152 26, 492 2,271 107 53 17,759 18, 572 20,084 31, 085 24, 198 16, 955 30, 783 226 27, 672 28, 324 15, 193 J3, 139 18, 251 27,201 101, 497 4,844 7,842 70, 030 685, 074 39, 875 1,450 125,421 194, 829 2,075 475, 936 600, 892 13, 450 232,034 578,795 334, 961 412, 085 667, 066 2,080 559, 182 1,700 345, 411 120,645 43, 916 241, 050 43,877 36,955 133,225 53,115 6,290 131, .366 115,837 589,201 108, 694 5,020 2,667 301, 455 622,530 402, 130 581, 292 454, 741 481, 057 609, 124 12,025 836, 251 607, 695 479, 450 229,786 310, 132 511,361 59, 867 1,786 3,209 24,651 472, 968 13,058 72 50,577 28,078 232 448, 803 592, 117 4,298 54, 061 28,233 17, 982 221, 109 122, 246 310 323, 861 45 208,877 48, 850 14, 742 45, 147 11,799 16, 016 56, 648 10,590 2,424 57, 786 36,988 118, 012 60,071 846 260 104,629 339,126 100, 827 T2, 910 177, 464 263, 866 116, 470 1,150 141, 844 251, 256 144, 354 21, KJ9 63,359 106, 401 50 2,728 117 894 614 250 1,164 5,560 6,117 1,335 5,085 5,509 118 302 751 1,060 708 404 4,588 337 787 1,796 153 4,37? 2,316 12, 115 21, 799 1,618 12, 573 812 4,088 3,059 143, 590 5,980 16, 865 116, 204 1, 227, 783 35, 995 195 111,043 516, 490 385 540, 223 795, 305 23,955 470, 023 1, 203, 794 636, 339 437, 078 1, 251, 700 1,230 708, 997 1,055 300, 844 119, 356 52,707 463, 860 89,560 50, 435 278, 840 45, 505 4, .^80 250, 345 226, 035 1, 319, 803 76, 007 4,190 1,580 653, 416 760, 546 906, 615 1, 171, 985 1, 106, 661 721, 592 1, 324, 715 7,815 1, 50i, 117 1, 048, 581 1, 050, 830 569, 145 694, 785 1, 318, 310 56, 664 955 520 20, 077 199, 801 9,426 51, 090 30, 665 410 424, 522 280, 556 2,506 31, 465 44, 789 23,173 247, 360 52, 127 100 369, 927 198, 725 51, 782 12, 765 33, 005 5,252 17, 138 14, 088 8,209 1,518 46, 863 29,900 36, 852 50, 572 950 150 94, 360 302, 332 76, 849 36, 929 161, 452 193, 144 81, 836 1,101 42, 647 222,224 35, 531 30, 779 39, 787 77, 969 ,835 225 204 826 100 9,137 30 2,008 353 140 3,672 28,615 23,074 3,133 2, ,382 394 255 456 535 35 1,543 525 2,271 180 2,635 2,381 24,545 1,100 1,505 1,176 4,615 25 3,000 2,734 2,218 29, 799 967 2,808 4,732 10, 860 13, 643 1,044 87 1,012 5,637 421 6,087 8, .563 5,396 1,278 145 9,550 32, 803 17, 326 4,219 14, 757 6,870 10, 525 2,711 188 6,944 2,341 846 4,075 625 100 4,628 1,868 19,135 1,094 54 4,313 11, 898 10, 086 27, 069 12, 574 10, 094 22,583 26, 196 16, 291 10,000 9,855 8,674 35, 348 179 39 43 309 476 79 112 582 3 594 958 95 439 1,212 991 389 808 1, 107 80 234 48 401 134 72 378 80 12 303 575 1, 503 120 12 13 502 1,100 408 490 21 549 835 2 1,134 732 239 619 1,270 522 30, 572 1,030 1,266 8,222 56, 067 10, 268 190 46, 772 18, 370 150 91,634 90, 851 2,102 20, 364 22,487 26, 634 56, 947 57, 598 1,360 125, 854 590 61, 250 37, 380 9,009 17, 220 5,404 6,816 11, 293 10. 212 2,945 24, 843 16, 814 53, 465 32, 775 2,321 205 48, 896 70, 150 41, 461 38, 761 69, 591 56, 035 44,325 5,430 92. 213 66, 050 38, 938 16, 728 29,496 37, 431 39 1,958 520 202 394 701 486 29 !,360 11 191 12 156 3,593 127 722 3,370 581 357 3,836 4,778 684 1,975 722 551 2,492 48 STATE OF IOWA. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. 1 l = ,£3 is » n § 1 o 1 a a L o g S> 1! r o so -a a g c S M o •3 O 1 s .s o C.4 O a o i CO I 1 i o O 1 p 5 s o to" 1 1 Adair 208 849 648 16,067 HI 259 130 1,404 142 95 18,205 29, .198 188,499 321,497 8,800 190, 987 148, 009 145, 370 114,770 155, 183 350 485 1,125 16, 813 8,159 1,065 9,851 17,131 8,431 9,821 14, 263 1,768 2,337 14, 687 14, 033 1,068 15,249 12,412 6,711 10, 653 13,344 60 ■12 65 248 3,909 o 1 7,404 $60 535 $325 434 24 22 4 AppanooPe ... 5 264 5 Audubon 6 877 1,413 89 919 954 9 3 9 2 120 3,746 289 572 364 344 357 11 32 7 8 12 q 17 20 SO 1,060 6 86 in 11 Bucna Vista 1" Buncombe It Butler 83 50 88,550 5,185 3,578 31,958 380, 877 19, 835 400 113, 825 107, 970 850 341,714 368, 729 4,089 97, 167 235, 849 132, 367 246,810 875, 547 1,800 390,280 1,380 287, 560 73, 903 24,281 110,586 17, 818 33,385 66, 684 40,810 5,000 79,270 73, 384 296, 974 85, 171 5,050 1,250 168, 439 374, 644 173, 420 257, 044 212,793 201,694 231, 603 12, i:!4 302, 363 229, 760 253,603 149, 535 145, 435 189, 1 13 7,832 525 7,898 484 454 3, 704 20, 933 2,603 103 12, 281 5,286 135 25, 887 88,488 803 3,588 10, 991 5,050 22, 035 15, 634 232 33, 682 197 20,333 8,442 2,891 1,462 2, 220 2,481 5,249 3,74» 419 6,973 6,016 16,123 8,588 590 210 12,458 23, 687 13,141 13,218 20, 516 24,415 8,114 1,803 19, 759 26, 503 13,237 3,680 10, 958 14, 783 230 14 15 Carroll 429 2,203 447 16 Cass 2 16,546 18 242 210 130 14, 570 38, 739 2,240 4 163 41 1,816 8 14 17 Cedar 2,520 18 Cerro Gordo 10 90 475 10 79 5,421 7,080 2,787 400 14, 230 28, 064 500 6,126 9.152 10,833 60, 683 8,600 743 3 68 236 115 91 99 Clay 93 Clayton 10, 929 37, 152 10 12 637 109 10, 664 6,475 889 454 18 652 12,804 11, 892 675 8, .594 117 1,331 127 316 292 5,670 555 32 238 12 368 28,005 4 360 3 456 1,596 94 6 37 95 96 Dallas 33 477 50 205 21, 934 11 5 183 5,721 795 617 2,101 17 104 97 Davis 63 5 15 19 "8 Decatur 99 18 840 12 42 10 Des Moines 31 19 28, 707 1,247 98 3,490 31, 443 400 11, 567 9,100 1,980 7,727 703 8,190 1,960 820 100 3,321 8,331 19,092 6,535 50 21 925 104 33 Emmett 34 4,237 485 672 167 101 8,488 10 9 323 219 119 872 50 215 97 43 39 5 2 37 35 Floyd 36 Franklin 12 1,523 1,317 45 17 Frfemont 509 513 6 94 38 Greene 39 Grundy 900 21 93 224 40 Gutlirie 40 41 Hamilton 6 23 42 Hancock 43 Hardin 70 325 3,018 3,028 231 190 10, 924 141 50 182 28 2,399 41 10 44 Harrison 1,111 23, 113 45 Henry 9,290 197 176 224 46 Howard 47 Humboldt 48 Ida 25 49 1,112 5,198 1,257 1,013 4,520 5,936 2,659 962 4,603 712 12, 045 604 84 5,980 75 5,327 226 6,330 1,024 5.33 1,708 250 105 32 91 20 9 o 12, 396 25, 704 14, 899 5,514 12, 575 33, 188 13, 033 60 83, 634 25,833 5, 177 6,823 7, 179 13,247 10 86 2.19 1.071 133 0,174 1,341 675 254 50 Jackson 403 30 2,530 3,902 643 4,500 100 9 141 7 61 4 51 Jasper 5" Jefferson 303 13 85 86 ll Johnson M Jones 55 Keokuk 56 Kossuth 57 Loo 11, 162 3,023 381 10, 800 512 2,191 9,122 5,637 2,460 20, 239 1,510 8, 159 131 38 10, 504 635 39 31 6 5,626 1,242 1,946 1,013 471 1,273 81 45 •iR .59 60 61 512 3,033 403 2.954 1 43 28, 061 1,999 49 1 44 1 44 1 69 Mahaska STATE OF IOWA. 49 AGRICULTURE: PRODUCED. ■s 1 < HEMP. "S" § o Pt a" 1 §"3 S S 00 1 1 = 1 o nog bD II 1 of It a s, a a o 0) H ■a P i i o 35 374 2 430 2,792 4,772 1,233 29, 991 889 16,363 7,169 10, 162 5,434 9,425 16 102 584 916 325 2,635 5,362 40, 436 475 7,795 2,103 15, 085 4,110 5,299 $435 1,495 1,200 21,253 502 3,554 842 6,898 1,043 1,577 $7, 139 8,681 80,311 117, 812 3,470 48,462 29, 579 24,010 22,325 33,241 60 1 11 9 316 P 75,553 1,675 835 3 3 4 5 595 325 3,710 350 292 12 45 24 28 26 1,615 9,741 23,638 23,637 70 133 987 554 671 301 92 500 256 868 6 7 8 9 48 10 in n 12 358 11 795 825 4,082 68 607 3,685 22, 000 190 52 6 1,382 50 120 1,104 2,685 125 666 55 702 6,295 17,856 1,347 1,350 9,515 160, 127 11,799 150 25,861 29,468 350 125,769 95,243 2,960 30,325 123,899 61,098 75, 533 153, 747 450 135, 112 417 43,298 23,793 6,695 44,-255 8,415 4,612 18, 830 6,988 886 31, 147 30, 595 144, 482 14, 872 702 343 59,749 127, 671 89, 705 100, 769 103, 174 91, 271 79, 078 1,526 201, 072 88, 310 153, 605 58,282 46,113 66,457 13 14 30 68 142 1 2 19 15 172 100 130 1,6 17 40 18 19 460 2,195 84 143 13,229 295 634 25, 154 50 184 3,982 9,173 234 4,697 20 91 9? 123 62 2 64 19,210 640 5 4,072 9,186 218 26,813 40, 680 30, 369 7,891 14,541 292 246 84 405 1,191 806 349 587 8,267 7,642 1,810 10,013 60, 548 28,303 6,047 28,454 1,029 157 23 26 24 25 835 1,431 2,913 94 240 1,828 118 181 5 458 3,762 66 5,601 19, 383 10, 981 2,053 3,396 as 27 10 30 1,745 2,814 2,040 28 235 154 29 30 .31 4 200 34 9 723 107 2,703 205 1,703 1,132 417 7,098 3,626 1,219 15,705 1,009 422 8,074 2,013 32 33 44 35 3 8 10, 578 11,434 150 870 643 14 40 7 1,071 33 8 2,722 4,041 140 20, 119 852 100 1,594 300 1,073 34 35 36 5,210 1,033 131 1,092 37 430 207 5 232 35 3R 39 66 6 241 319 40 3,170 41 42 200 100 145 4 1 610 4,355 290 9,613 9,175 52,234 101 897 1,047 3,567 21, 895 25, 706 40 1,814 752 7,315 43 44 30 7, 820 1,000 496 45 46 225 47 48 495 90 32 306 20 465 19,091 13,394 48, 893 34, 585 13,996 12, 680 66, 017 10 24, 636 23,088 22,895 19,445 36, 134 52, 491 354 1,855 281 2,112 127 324 293 9,600 18, 496 18, 076 33, 612 7,690 6,960 28,162 10, 190 2,328 5,964 14,301 139 2,083 8,392 49 10 32,782 442 75 10 9 .W .51 90 798 395 120 .52 r\3 5 296 587 83 8 4 ii4 .W .16 212 300 200 466 2,714 408 149 11 3,043 9,254 1,150 343 382 36 1,109 1,013 366 335 1,238 1,222 30, 551 16, 620 21, 138 18, 657 27, 399 27, 161 4,489 8,522 1,906 0,344 7,708 10,088 .W .IS .w 21 126 109 60 20 55 10,945 70 61 62 50 STATE OF IOWA. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. ACRES OF LAND. s> S 2 LIVE STOCK. ■3 a I o 63 64 65 66 07 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 Manona Marion Marshall Mills Mitcliell Monroe Montgomery... Muscatine Osceola* O'Brien Page Pocahontas ... Palo Alto Plymouth Polk Pottawatomie . Poweshiek Ringgold Sac Scott Shelby Sioux* , Story Tama Taylor Union "Van Buren . . . Wapello WaiTen "Washington . . Wayne Webster , Winnebago. . . Winneshiek . - . Woodbury . . . Worth , Wright 2,883 78, 759 34,350 29, 531 17,549 51, 120 5,770 112,899 14, 915 123, 833 79, 585 73, 700 665, 615 91, 295 18, 414 73, 666 $92, 435 2, 778, 960 1, 017, 015 1, 330, 710 607, 070 1, 997, 648 232, 082 3, 886, 294 $6, 610 122, 907 57,022 59, 919 33, 664 73,354 8,858 145, 405 136 4,174 1,623 1,440 683 2,283 318 4,926 5 J56 20 48 6 96 200 231 4,332 1,628 1,571 1,063 2,367 325 5,389 143 1,241 377 565 534 821 143 941 326 8, 020" 2,087 2,710 1,184 3,796 465 7,067 188 9,644 3,440 2,011 358 6,499 517 1,733 25 26, 425 139 345 1,316 45, 040 17, 066 36, 762 16, 875 903 151, 053 3,910 135 65, 824 656 1,384 4,286 73, 473 35,240 61,253 39, 076 2,683 43, 209 14,558 800 1,645,890 2,700 4,650 32, 810 1, 892, 316 424,211 975, 925 425, 098 41, 850 4, 405, 186 127, 610 43, 896 170 415 1,805 62, 274 23, 565 38, 304 18, 491 1,700 209, 274 6,541 1,568 4 12 29 2,559 940 1,614 919 45 5,334 259 40 184 4 1,445 28 49 78 2,558 1,198 1,520 789 75 5,662 312 4 721 20 31 75 584 382 403 411 34 936 141 7 2,646 63 100 146 3,742 2,138 2,204 1,177 109 7,338 322 4,012 4,067 890 4,804 757 84 1,383 228 24,711 10, 615 18, 288 12, 456 91, 914 65, 477 47, 906 109, 863 41, 015 10, 101 364 66, 211 2,696 2,325 1,685 Total. 3, 792, 792 48, 674 5,956 62, 556 30, 131 121, 364 82,831 96, 930 113, 043 97. 071 20, 754 3,579 158, 557 12, 194 18, 405 4,934 626,574 313, 943 577, 647 377, 447 2, 800, 204 2, 064, 023 1, 843, 000 3, 304, 843 1, 185, 586 257, 465 11, 900 2, 224, 697 127, 698 120, 800 49, 095 30, 004 18, 066 23,007 19, 295 123, 876 61, 303 72, 094 143, 116 46, 300 13,122 1,298 152,387 7,199 8,232 3,815 6,277,115 119,899,547 5, 327, 033 1,107 545 1,097 569 4,688 2,909 2,689 4,380 1,800 489 7 2,804 196 82 175, 088 12 9 24 28 230 283 42 179 50 5,734 1,211 629 991 689 4,809 3,013 2,530 4,847 1,877 616 42 4,195 229 327 128 189,802 297 148 524 315 860 735 510 1,139 829 302 30 2,167 162 214 38 1,460 918 1,292 763 9,812 5,865 4,199 7,103 2,608 885 58 5,922 413 350 213 56,964 293,322 1,205 428 2,056 804 11, 359 9,480 4,890 6,797 5,330 651 11 3,958 130 153 41 259,041 STATE OF IOWA. 51 AGRICULTURE. LlVi!! STOCK. PRODUCED. OQ 1 i 3 1 1 1 1 m 1 « g 1 •5 1 i ■s ■s 1 o p( o 1 as a If 1 1 i It § s Ja II s .a it 1 950 $27,167 566,456 216,706 202,124 110,070 324,708 50,667 657, 605 4,326 119,836 81,801 77,053 63,961 38,538 10,605 346,481 78 7,811 1,736 1,957 1,349 4,179 353 15,590 35,745 1,57: ,066 477,775 393,880 101, 489 730,856 103, 700 1,144,985 4,020 84,034 83,285 38,103 51,833 29,699 4,514 111,142 1,890 23,221 8,959 4,829 625 19,548 1,751 4,795 221 601 354 1,017 343 914 214 1,105 4,871 43, 899 25,885 22,303 39, 425 21,455 4,434 117, 138 63 8,293 5,908 9,178 1 877 5,007 2,844 70 82 64 fiS 200 2,595 14,208 66 67 16,163 3,269 23,525 989 68 69 1,880 3,986 70 71 g 350 207,543 2,000 3,125 8,085 283,756 134, 3K 215,044 99,289 7,875 616, 530 37,516 30 47,444 50 10 2,131 75,210 52,817 71,612 10,640 769 746, 634 9,300 100 368,380 1,380 1,705 9,040 1,553,000 234,530 543,615 204,319 6,670 1,015,796 45,875 5 16,525 30 15, 140 650 2,550 2,970 29,218 21, 731 24, 911 10,318 1,395 164, 484 4,180 72 9,193 27 124 5,398 10, 182 635 169 73 74 38 110 50 47,772 23,134 49,639 10, 157 1,562 267, 970 3,562 10 75 76 11,686 3,399 8,914 6,161 182 343 691 110 891 30 50 10, 682 1,487 8,838 2,429 146 5,131 750 76 690 752 8 81 77 78 79 3,623 449 46 1,199 131 80 81, 18, 538 2,322 2,225 625 925 82 R3 84 3,392 2,038 10, 899 4,350 25,180 17,725 19,990 29,805 14,239 1,932 43 10,913 1,077 374 167 116, 260 77,664 122, 051 83, 659 556, 185 356,279 351,658 658,476 247,615 60,408 3,055 439, 380 34,077 26, 970 13, 146 33, 411 29,364 19,489 10,735 63, 480 44,490 72,756 164,442 15,518 7,186 632 341, 973 3,559 6,492 4,520 137 5,462 533 852 9,389 5,533 450 6,242 2,409 438 194, 127 127,265 262, 200 160, 635 1, 155, 573 992, 060 872, 949 1,410,420 572, 164 63,466 3,120 331, 676 24, 434 18,667 7,660 17, 744 23,995 7,609 7,581 37, 384 28,955 50,882 76,625 25,471 7,916 350 321,303 3,787 3,703 2,967 5,630 1,177 2,590 643 5,807 1,910 5,826 2,680 9,956 3,116 1,380 5,144 1,174 27,777 25,200 13, 757 18, 95B 13,268 813 27 10,286 350 386 98 266 206 . 427 210 975 325 485 739 621 165 17 570 956 29 55 18, 164 10,575 14, 152 9,887 32, 713 25,900 29,938 55,966 15, 255 16,649 2,225 80,788 6,510 8,641 3,090 64 40 231 36 1,855 209 2,156 1,968 493 22 R5 86 87 88 8p 90 91 92 93 94 95 1,303 170 825 10 96 97 98 99 934,820 22,476,293 8,449,403 183,022 42,410,686 5,887,645 303,168 660,858 41,081 2,806,720 51, 362 52 STATE OF IOWA. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. •3 1 1 if-s 1 u O i i! o Pi 1" 1 p. t i P o |"S 1 1 63 $30 621 12,475 228,532 106, 838 112, 271 72,795 171, 243 21, 395 272, 595 1,400 23,502 9,398 7,739 12,125 6,386 2,300 25,540 1,357 9,474 7,879 7,465 9,112 8,625 1,547 19, 572 64 712 573 495 4,559 4,198 109 2,291 363 8,666 1,059 2,199 $821 59 136 11 686 155 2 116 3,492 35 4,714 65 66 Milla . . . . 589 143 67 Mitchell 4 m 3 153 et 6 2 70 MuBcatine 29,719 5,198 375 7,231 •193 71 72 O'Brien 100 95, 651 1,350 2,125 3,195 146,907 81, 970 91; 876 53, 541 5,200 353,337 16, 740 100 3,745 1,000 30 1,932 222 430 475 10,947 5,545 4,158 4,778 505 22,100 1,859 71 71 2,264 150 6 5,722 506 123 7'i 7fi 365 155 6,169 10 100 6,077 3,281 4,560 2,716 550 32,173 '465 77 Polk 1,985 306 197 596 532 4,913 81 2 277 45 70 63 209 3 78 70 Poweshiek 27 80 28 81 Sac 89 Scott 222,126 1,122 157 8,576 76 2 21,658 50 293 1,675 122 81 Shelby 84 Sioux 8'i 29 260 ■ 70 88 2,174 64 1,689 4,819 10 110 10 20,415 10 319 110 155 3,924 2,072 17,336 7,141 3,288 7,803 9,561 669 40 192 30 157 30 20 99, 757 39, 009 66, 004 40, 105 299, 632 155,900 128, 900 298, 188 170, 887 58,625 3,353 320, 988 6,882 21, 080 7,690 2,335 4,389 4,661 6,551 18, 503 4,561 7,887 23,238 5,820 2,490 200 24, 843 1,500 2,300 2,515 6,829 «07 4,549 3,704 13, 937 10, 910 9,955 11,857 9,601 4,686 433 29, 563 1,057 2,525 1,375 46 575 133 49 3,931 2,385 550 816 2,152 5 14 IB 86 Tama 10 150 87 Taylor 5 55 88 89 9,659 223 286 212 100 300 65 174 30~ W Wapello tl "Warren 11 10 10 11 25 4 15 qn 7,454 131 "n 14 65 MR <)6 Winneshiek 13 593 10 W Woodbury 66 PS Worth 13,381 1,120 12,909 1,015 SO 153 1,055 60 3,017 800 13 18 14 9,903 23,082 5,438 14,185 3,054 1,560 294 1,679 464 IS 5,898 1 1,385 16 17 669 22,800 5,565 58,091 168, 595 125,929 198,735 220,305 204,900 26,500 200 19,925 75,003 38,450 73,880 47,127 159 600 3,559 4,057 7,911 1,092 7,083 7,972 1,538 50 573 1,447 1,481 4,554 1,190 26,650 4,437 194, 50O 344, 160 268,010 517, 600 389,971 309,630 46,000 300 36,250 31,450 48, 575 115,760 75,470 525 151 99 11 71 406 673 1,090 814 353 83 1,506 145 4,578 12,489 10,652 29,690 10, 872 8,589 1,334 63 18 55 11 1,995 10, 430 4,062 10, 101 440 2,058 4,615 4,333 6,705 3,026 36 on 595 20 2,381 290 149 1,842 465 461 47 91 v> 2,008 3,613 90 23 7,693 9 1,813 1 94 7,932 'S 954 540 Qfi 40 "7 844 50 50 26 50 100 965 359 1,075 463 95 1,940 250 232 650 30 226 2 101 15 .280 4,915 1,026 2,344 7,381 4,897 25 250 78 "8 3,523 1 1,104 on 30 2,397 1,838 31 730 39 33 4,407 109,390 37,445 124,955 76,068 3,982 1,294 14,483 5,624 50 25 120 371 152,190 85,310 304,195 86,590 865 3,273 4,430 1,151 325 78 435 169 763 245 9,821 4,753 20, 375 10,380 221 42 530 189 14 2'398 Ti ,4,420 2,529 100 2,200 36 500 37 38 3<» 1,455 1,454 39,535 42,015 1,464 23 40,315 83,380 260 3,145 520 234 170 80 2,354 9,285 61 10 4n 41 138,224 3,332,450 194, 173 3,833 6,150,727 88,325 20,349 61 24,746 9,827 296,335 9,965 56 STATE OF KANSAS, AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. •S 1 1 r 1 f J t o i •6 II s:- "S a o 1 ■s ! i .£3 ED 1 p o 1 1 1 Allen 15 65 715 60 95 1,174 1,635 756 1,395 2,633 178 424 4 3,050 228 «3 199 178 5,085 147, 992 11,865 35, 650 56,238 4,525 9,095 1,190 32, 944 12,095 2,150 83,986 521 215 580 150 2,050 1,880 92 100 6,084 99 2,475 3,159 230 1,005 110 205 900 165 2,833 40 119 450 40 133 o 5 6 52 100 ? Atchison 100 2,690 100 1,450 50 4 Bourbon 100 6 5 1 6 120 7 Butler 3 6 R Chase 2 900 q Clay 10 Coffee 2 427 785 1,265 113 11 Davis 51 19 Dickinson IS Doniphan ... 1,220 1,777 6 35 2,674 986 164 10 14 Dorn Ti Douglas 297 170 3,452 1,582 80 50 70 242 700 2,097 97, 495 70,851 1,605 3,132 3,985 2,278 Ifi Franklin 368 17 Godfrey 1R Greenwood 60 384 1,248 10,250 1,300 23,830 51, 131 48,860 46, 437 68,597 53,100 6,930 150 655 71 519 3,947 3,041 1,878 4,095 3,632 431 16 25 IP Hunter 90 Jackson 894 2,398 1,588 442 2,765 2,119 258 91 170 350 900 226 8 2 o 626 150 11, 295 125 35 35 1,211 370 10 1,715 6,000 231 470 e 99 Johnson 82 ?.1 Leavenworth 94 100 8 287 313 4 95 Lykins 5 9fi Madison 97 Marion SR Marshall 58 929 93 122 957 2,306 90 2,156 5,851 360 9,895 21, 100 14,555 320 727 6 939 1,834 902 14 29 MoGhee 16 3n Morris 340 100 280 310 7 160 31 Nemeha 30 3 32 Osage 6 1,510 33 Otoe 34 Pottawatomie 45 967 482 4,341 1,007 38,960 11,135 59, 511 28,500 400 810 1,300 1,840 2,364 1,057 3,217 1,940 35 Eiley 27 845 225 18 1 3fi Shawnee 37 Wabaunsee 151 29 5 3fi Washhigton 39 Wilson 40 Woodson 805 335 2,262 500 13, 292 8,564 160 1,182 75 69 15 41 Wyandott 270 Total 4,716 41,575 656 583 31,641 1,093,497 29,045 56,232 103 3,043 197 STATE OF KANSAS. 57 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. 1 > 1 a 1 HEMP. 1 ■2 o p. 6< ■4-4 o 1 1 o Ph 8 a o O -S DO s ° ■3 S a 1 h o 02 "3 1 a g p. a o w Manufacturea, home- made, value of. 1 > Q 1 o c3 o 142 1,836 5,365 8,521 3,618 1,713 160 465 526 2,728 812 1 17 74 55 J17, 328 19,229' 46, eoo 33,297 17, 364 19, 057 1,610 3,839 459 14, 825 4,788 680' 46, 304 45 41, 062 30, 827 1 280 277 1,480 $146 604 1,540 725 300 o 3 3 40 4 o 5 55 975 6 60 7 40 500 8 9 17 275 10 10 n 12 40 1 2,679 113 5,874 2,136 13 j 14 1,774 5,687 4,271 155 125 40 15 772 16 17 200 5 474 4 590 4,373 2,442 290 9,643 8,127 515 3,630 345 5,442 43, 554 18, 732 36, 435 44,432 26, 048 3,505 18 19 49S 20 2 58 7 50 519 2,107 55 890 2,S21 180 2,360 130 1,839 6,145 1,730 21 800 22 23 40 1,036 24 1 25 26 27 691 1,318 337 1,542 1,011 4,443 403 60 1,335 10 1,665 9,568 3,088 7,427 4,152 28 575 29 30 10 300 31 32 33 125 3 1 3,512 1,040 6,7S8 5,033 11, 115 7,053 18, 740 8,782 34 340 35 36 100 .37 38 39 1,373 10 540 150 70 5,070 2,077 40 41 1 . 1,135 11 40 3,742 2 87,656 1,181 16, 944 24,748 558, 174 — . -8 58 STATE OF KENTUCKY. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. ACRES OP LAND. sa LIVE STOCK. Adair Allen Anderson Ballard Barren Bath Boone Bourbon Boyd Boyle Bracken Breathitt Brocldnridgo . Bullitt Butler Caldwell Calloway Campbell Can-oil Carter Casey Christian Clark Clay Clinton Crittenden . . . Cumberland .. Daviess Edmondson .. Eslill Fayette Fleming Floyd Franklin Pullon Gallatin Garrard Grant Graves Grayson Greene Greenup Hancock Hardin Harlan Harrison Hart Henderson Henry Hickman Hopkins Jackson Jefferson Jessamine Johnson Kenton Knox La Itne Lanrol Lawrence Letcher Lewis 58, 132 58,096 63, 842 44, 922 114, 150 125, 894 94, 210 176, 916 15, 290 78, 746 70, 560 18, 093 75, 096 54, 065 42, 210 66, 717 52, 112 42, 203 44, 632 43, 334 50, 965 158, 092 147, 889 27, 590 41, 558 51, 695 45, 656 93, 322 25, 316 40, 828 174, 866 107, 841 27, 963 82, 462 26, 418 38,181 112, 812 66, 409 89, 677 56, fiOl 65, 009 33, 129 30, 632 131, 514 27, 126 159, 462 50, 408 92, 814 115, 169 30,583 79, 736 12, 922 114, 857 76, 313 21, 563 51, 454 48, 910 53, 263 34,729 38, 236 16, 291 49, 837 102, 239 106, 013 41, 328 117, 550 172, 441 84, 307 54, 684 91, 014 32, 628 57, 770 226, 518 134, 453 74, 378 142, 203 107, 731 133, 320 25,285 33, 252 241, 874 129, 829 215, 970 227, 306 60, 970 129, 736 97,844 146, 859 77, 171 106, 868 1,603 67, OOO 180, 529 31, 439 32,623 26, 399 21, 982 52, 765 230, 408 138, 417 83, 420 89, 249 48, 506 184, 497 341, 051 30, 681 104, 183 154, 936 56, 276 63, 353 109, 018 72,723 57, 175 38, 499 156, 287 35, 214 169, 064 87, 487 119, Oil 198, 275 150,912 110, 585 $1, 062, 283 1, 414, 413 1, 798, 182 2, 236, 281 2, 590, 583 3, 694, 743 6, 386, 165 13, 036, 380 610,225 3, 424, 814 2, 493, 125 452, 020 1, 677, 235 1, 773, 744 1, 073, 144 1, 972, 031 1, 618, 946 2, 797, 505 2, 008, 835 1, 122, 061 1, 020, 700 8, 914, 405 6, 589, 098 501, 280 842, 066 1, 530, 405 1,252,562 4, 598, 215 505, 803 967, 549 13, 431, 717 3,127,018 632, 430 2, 574, 235 1, 323, 214 1, 414, 627 3, 974, 189 2, 121, 321 3, 140, 260 986, 267 1, 154, 698 1, 190, 619 1, 092, 955 3, 456, 456 540, 784 5, 632, 940 1, 372, 929 5, 242, 955 4, 536, 880 1, 108, 323 2, 373, 995 255, 526 11, 140, 950 5, 297, 860 482, 795 2, 613, 330 881, 141 1, 467, 474 472, 778 837, 015 281, 764 1, 428, 467 57, 391 52, 116 65, 438 126, 031 75, 154 114, 808 142, 240 8,558 77, 529 87, 107 6,627 82, 631 59, 843 44, 143 70, 114 65, 812 61, 900 48, 534 37, 898 41, 359 246, 719 93, 217 17, 137 31, 542 62, 265 38, 517 122, 699 27, 409 25,412 138, 870 106, 637 9,474 63, 556 33,125 43,362 64, 915 59, 024 141,834 57, 654 44, 367 34, 517 44, 552 139, 354 12,028 136, 301 52, .552 153, 169 120, 507 43, 586 86, 752 3,601 192, 773 94, 986 8,493 78, 315 22, 109 56, 587 22, 604 18, 041 14, 444 48, 031 2,742 3,389 3,210 1,837 6,521 5,549 4,388 7,397 556 3,775 3,886 806 3,163 2,443 2,461 2,683 2,868 2,305 2,335 1,786 2,520 4,952 6,910 982 1,390 2,617 2,030 4, 495 1,368 1,911 8,155 5,206 1,310 3,736 1,186 1,920 4,526 3,358 5,440 2,602 2,743 1,221 1,427 6,228 1,199 7,925 2, 783 3, 502 5,439 1, 460 3,913 483 5,915 4,865 1,018 2,513 1,737 2,728 1,165 1,484 710 2,547 614 1,326 961 736 1,504 2,758 610 8,984 84 3,482 159 38 530 313 327 1,229 1,022 117 365 198 532 3,595 4,333 217 368 637 383 1,033 65 319 4,28? 968 52 1,574 689 134 2,875 417 2,206 204 738 145 149 652 86 2, 627 464 1,756 1,374 641 987 30 1,012 1,434 59 238 240 246 88 41 34 176 2,214 2,'l71 1,835 2,158 4,179 3,400 3,031 4,510 563 2,303 2,300 1,465 2,496 2,163 1,965 2,302 2,397 2,198 1,461 2,052 1,768 4,436 3,560 1,976 1,446 2,215 1,809 3,816 1,216 1,464 4, 44,9 2,882 1,819 2,252 1,257 1,258 2,460 2, 062 ■I, 716 2,410 2,136 1,229 1,434 4,721 2,143 4,065 2,359 3,303 3,377 1,543 3,226 645 5,492 2,639 1,289 2,298 2,207 2,162 1,334 1,906 1,285 1, 917 883 1,320 564 1,300 2,181 1,904 584 954 603 604 486 827 1,316 500 1,258 1,624 1,337 201 614 1, 355 1,022 1,487 1,665 919 916 1,582 1,126 1,879 796 922 1, 065 605 1,076 649 496 475 965 825 2,615 1,386 1,163 1,039 788 1,568 1,034 913 1,194 1,535 662 798 1,594 337 365 486 705 265 527 580 811 1,517 336 743 2,606 9,406 2,598 9,399 2,225 5,664 3,692 3,399 6,224 18,507 6,019 12, 130 5,897 14,817 12, 411 16,639 1,666 2,632 4,754 8,572 3,615 6,556 2,125 4,676 3,441 10,510 3,319 7,621 3,275 7,212 4,030 7,257 3,388 9,367 1,931 2,510 2,316 4, .347 3,497 8,973 3,336 10,811 6,022 15,915 10, 891 14,084 3,038 6,597 2,136 5,785 3,930 8,954 3,039 7,706 6,570 11, 604 1,879 5,307 2,694 5,870 11,251 15,130 4,716 10,969 3,693 6,947 3,341 6,125 2,115 3,616 1,955 3,843 4,542 7,368 4,130 6,645 7,668 15, 443 5,199 12, 418 3,409 9,503 2,570 3,463 2,027 4,581 6,275 17, 118 3,007 6,931 6,486 15, 506 2,345 9,408 6,150 7,744 5,223 12, 691 2,127 3,217 6,115 10,045 1,069 3,463 4,230 7,911 4,771 7,838 2,307 5,411 1,731 4,539 4,239 9, !)71 2,993 6,752 2,212 7,135 4^263 9,416 2,047 4,776 2,528 4,713 STATE OF KENTUCKY. 59 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PROmfcED. s = § ■■3 17, 574 18, 41-0 22,533 22,100 32, 418 36, 680 3n, 130 25, 584 4,158 21, 398 19,355 11,803 28,541 19,088 13, 660 25, 157 17, 512 11, 810 10,099 13, 797 24, 059 47,202 29,406 11,777 10, 798 21, 121 15,529 39, 774 9,388 11, 747 30, 257 25, 144 14, 945 19, 201 11, 671 11, 804 29, 071 23,103 34,046 22,778 17,522 8,946 13, 304 54,110 15,520 28,658 20, 007 36, 143 42, 196 14, 113 30, 146 4,803 35, 921 18, 119 10,586 15, 601 15,522 20, 853 9,447 17, 481 10, 237 12, 457 $380, 653 468, 434 491, 019 418,742 912, 534 1, 034, 749 758, 037 2, 390, 873 95,083 924, 779 542,271 150, 560 500, 422 347, 055 326, 500 502, 397 469,831 269, 974 363, 490 310, 31'? 458, 691 1, 03^803 1, 692, 938 211, 586 241, 417 408, 729 266, 295 777, 459 212, 889 300, 721 1, 819„237 765, 207 183, 526 609, 623 227,137 315, 641 1, 000, 549 519, 633 814, 394 411,581 390, 029 217, 274 258, 824 799, 054 184, 694 1, 207, 032 405, 068 739, 644 931, 147 279, 278 599, 180 78, 883 877, 085 825, 865 156, 519 363, 364 273, 618 391, 165 165, 620 350, 059 119, 006 326, 517 29, 513 29, 948 55,647 53, 048 74, 612 94, 703 139, 297 293, 269 19, 457 90,772 96,547 7,259 69, 213 54,165 22, 900 45, 693 27, 602 57,002 55, 430 23,177 22,765 205, 443 93,044 13, 701 24, 129 .38,251 18, 133 74, OH 15, 912 17,773 22^028 133,630 16, 329 84, 131 36, 033 69, 726 77, 900 67,903 89, 896 29, 991 31, 101 48, 637 25,049 158,289 10, 306 192, 898 45, 331 48, 391 139, 802 35, 557 31,215 4,432 155, 783 190, 030 11,982 56, 943 22,856 62,768 17, 697 22, 524 8,383 60, 377 1,391 355 27, 415 714 7,074 26, 515 44, 010 20,234 259 24, 894 21, 370 365 5,306 5,203 144 2,331 944 5,205 6,524 2,797 14, 154 13,324 32,548 1,693 667 754 1,137 8,047 582 4,285 25,125 8,443 377 14, 164 435 5,008 23,845 20, 401 826 2,776 1,558 621 1,079 17,334 876 13, 561 5,721 4,296 25,006 513 403 569 12, 353 13, 065 1,524 28, 958 3,957 7,178 1,589 2,442 726 2,643 413, 205 450, 228 510, 505 525, 260 793, 806 1, 146, 696 917, 750 1,364,285 131, 750 741, 474 591,168 224, 100 623, 973 413, 610 310, 080 601, 525 500, 608 338, 825 388, 400 363, 066 521, 948 1, 155, 854 1, 056, 206 255, 667 263, 618 528, 950 348, 751 1, 083, 797 201, 590 391, 075 1, 544, 920 736, 673 304, 870 570, 800 322, 040 365, 225 741, 375 638, 725 1, 030, 331 431, 025 504, 000 331, 702 312, 450 1, 090, 591 244, 016 1, 181, 308 480, 214 1, 132, 935 886, 600 369, 026 068, 392 103, 955 974, 110 700, 300 228, 714 4.35, 823 3.53, 554 467, 400 190, 155 301, 982 138, 3a3 405, 368 24, 195 33, 109 36, 864 3,002 66, 730 129, 594 45, 929 183,129 11,188 137, 024 20, 649 4,358 60, 797 41, 696 6,409 10,978 866 30, 864 13, 631 27, 202 13, 599 02,341 136, 610 5,373 22, 947 5, 999 11, 082 37, 273 7,149 16, 093 208, 060 78,956 9,922 76, 320 373 16, 700 110, 870 21, 279 2,146 9,759 25, 498 24, 366 13, 349 45, 995 9,976 137, 151 15,555 24, 578 84, 062 1,494 10, 780 3, 163 134, 029 94, '494 18,304 24, 635 20, 2.39 14,487 21,684 17, 597 4,772 28, 987 767, 395 977, 491 36, 361 1,817,792 2, 330, 003 4,542 569, 649 869 1,496 8,278 2, 780, 444 8,698 2, 008, 523 8,800 984,257 3, 467, 871 2,379,955 40, 520 603,351 18, 572 79, 644 11,409,016 18, llO 9,361 189, 764 1,845,790 2, 076, 245 5„303,^470 366, 055 28, 779 2,5qo 204, 1G6 14, 416 175, 553 602, 792 511, 555 44, 753 292, 204 4^83,215 712, 166 1, 558, 697 1,804 1, 079, 098 525, 025 10,230 191, 340 1,6.';3,382 7,938,830 1, 556, 840 903, 367 3, 104, 330 6,582 13, 560 47, 500 11, 633 384, 485 1, 4.30 380,201 20, 885 15, 113 6,213 35, 593 15, 471 16,034 18, 973 7,469 55, 336 33,237 38, 094 78, 986 6,399 31, 770 14, 336 9,242 23, 157 14, 819 15, 545 14, 466 15, 131 4,180 13, 934 17, 733 18, 660 34, 190 53,246 12, 343 13, 492 15, 994 11, 801 23, 731 9,583 13, 378 75, 551 26,532 10,322 22, 347 7,452 11, 128 24, 531 23, 711 34, 154 21, 687 16, 692 5,622 10, 293 32, 437 12, 815 50,228 18, 823 19, 168 48, 731 6,533 18, 515 5,168 35, 788 30, 415 9,303 10, 245 15,381 14, 984 12, 295 14, 180 10, 572 13,228 17, 552 1,291 2,665 3,060 2,060 3,221 240 1,509 406 2,993 507 3,284 341 517 206 731 870 610 1,107 5,042 6,576 4,315 4,141 3,638 385 2,138 2,394 821 1,375 1,939 4,055 3,202 2,914 3,830 1,204 1,701 5,160 846 3,000 8,348 1,283 914 1,123 1,509 3,806 28 1,428 3,662 3,129 1,733 1,310 1,176 1,026 943 2,309 10 6,125 1,198 2,565 1,130 1,256 863 11, 282 9, .546 9,372 10, 936 17,719 23,788 34, 905 23, 667 5,891 14,881 13, 934 8,488 12, 902 9,101 3,460 11, 835 8,478 61, 419 26, 172 16, 959 13, 972 20, 344 19, 440 11, 692 5,929 11,270 8,562 18, 505 6,393 8,253 47, 396 14, 967 12, 146 23,537 7,809 12,458 13, 597 11,868 21, 428 13,220 9,430 10, 298 9,832 27, 798 12, 952 12, 805 10, 391 23, 412 22, 198 6,540 10, 924 5,439 177, 963 15,238 9,451 44, 745 13, 901 9,200 9,545 15,388 7,781 11, 305 16, 341 13, 092 3,T97 13, 721 33, 404 4,845 7,563 3,515 1,325 6,840 3,464 3,190 6,390 3,574 4,780 12, 223 22, 114 28, 971 3,443 4,038 13, Oil 31, 979 6,405 3,890 10,036 11, 717 12, 632 11, 937 3,043 4,498 15, 650 5,780 0,533 3,900 10, 556 3,752 7,324 1,869 50, 938 6,720 14, 198 2,411 4,337 14, 646 7,727 2,584 11, 332 11, Oil 8,153 11,455 14, 621 1,568 31,854 7,490 5,730 7,775 11, 355 7,808 5,485 7,993 3,355 3, 030 GO STATE OF KENTUCKY. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. 10 11 12 13 1-1 15 10 17 18 IS) SO 21 22 23 2-1 2Q 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 33 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 40 47 43 49 50 51 OJ Gi C-'l Atlair Allen Andursou Eallarcl iUarreu Balh Boone Bourbon Boyd Boyle Bracken Brcatbitt Breckicriclgc . Bullitt Butler Caldwell Calloway Campbell Carroll Carter <-'^L''-T Christian Clark Clay Clinton Crittenden . ... Cumberland . . Davicsa Edmondiion... Estill li'ayottu Fleming Floyd Franklin Fall^jn Gallatin Garrard , Grant , Graves Grayson Grocno Greenup Hancock Hardin ir;;rlau , JlaiTi.son ... Hart IleJidcruon . Henry Ilickinan . Ilopkjna. - ,K'!.;::;,; LiiP.ilo Lailivl 100 2, 'J50 2,540 853 7, 123 9, 329 50 110 10 15 248 5 10, 4,:3 11, 454 5,101 CO 088 1 118 3,230 200 2,298 90 45, 3U5 2,180 1, 234 Lilt \i 3 13 137 10 10 IGO 142 340 23 594 003 31 97 25 5 5 70 41,7 1(17 303 10 118 23 SI 23 20 177 104 120 539 64 59 14 130 St'4 98 205 33 e 286 170 303 281 05 721 1, 413 20 90 13 338 30 51 341 123 321 3J1 447 515 1,707 2,308 1, 894 8,037 1,066 14, 496 18, 941 13, 172 5,336 1,411 2, 902 2,403 45 1, 275 1,134 5, 103 3, 293 13, 817 43, 755 10, 905 14, 331 1,280 1,133 3, 755 2,007 7,S34 2 442 10, 059 14, 094 S,C33 7,149 10, 443 0,808 10, 460 3,340 7,438 350 110 0,635 5,637 6,478 994 1,080 080 9, 294 11, 038 10, 006 727 34, 218 0,03 J 4, 210 12, 700 402 433 1,038 7, 14! 233 30 5,508 240 1,243 14, 801 6 316 74, 520 2,220 154 1, 447 428 45 14 11 472 8,801 119 1,327 40 2,702 483 300 75 83 55 194 237 4,235 14 10,518 15 141 1, 0!9 65 145 14S 1,348 20, 598 4,230 2,795 3,815 58 280 893 83, 880 1,456 11, 104 3,988 1,343 4.32 245 54 I, 840 319 17, 3-U 1, 533 .3, 906 1, 425 1,313 1, 733 1,378 114 76 3, 049 628 32 3,975 90 587 3, 30.2 1,417 145, 003 4,820 02, 159 85 33 903 l,7iJ 1.90J 112, 540 88, 932 115, 558 102, 532 J104, 4 13 190, 327 196, 902 220, 190 29, 430 121, 903 134, 651 35, 005 100, 398 94, 352 67, 150 84, 058 63, 098 53, 375 88, 883 149, 170 115, 903 190, 236 165, 979 72, 097 70, 070 69, 060 1,070 222 847 30 704 1, 425 309 4,093 7,015 395 20 437 183 7 391 100 110 29 tT7 483 2, 943 50 1,315 02, 033 723 83, 171 245 48, 748 232 82, 511 930 203, 787 2,431 158, 183 03, 056 49, 370 143 108, 833 C7d 46, 3S0 180 77, 134 403 80; 956 3, 803 111, 026 621 187, 670 40 113, 501 489 73, 818 334 64, 241 45 68, 169 45 188, 099 303 53, 802 108 107, 065 0, 2;)7 87, 386 153 154, 364 250 190, 584 2,084 01, 281 15 127,281 173 2d, i;;5 50 233, 840 1,';70 123,805 530 7J, 949 151, 005 133, 183 114 71,436 1, 52". C','.173 33 63, 032 13 30, 3JJ 13J lO.i, 137 1, 113 410 1,107 714 1, 433 1,710 3,470 4, OtiS 881 2,799 1, 2^3 34 1,337 2,119 527 032 451 1, 7J7 3,910 943 733 1,348 209 337 528 597 2,896 137 823 3,039 3, 413 195 1, 224 2,202 1,477 1,814 1,331 1, 123 1,063 £03 1,462 2, 004 3,012 117 2,227 711 2,004 3,CS3 723 1,079 4:) 9,513 1, l,:7 304 2, 573 I 1,233 7:il 481 (;8 16 20 31 237 6 120 11 17 5 20 43 lU 19 150 591 331 31 317 33 7,339 1 594 215 5 29 240 353 2,073 158 401 331 6,940 00 320 305 33 33 295 108 476 559 66 39 133 318 1, TM 142 131 619 133 19 72 635 1 70 41 45 281 I 23 1, 320 105 83 21 027 18') 7 2. J 20 13 I BTATE OF KENTUCKY Gl AGRICULTUEE. PRODUCED. a ■a Ilh-iH'. H a E 1 s 3 1=3 1 B ■s t is S a to- es 1! a It m 1 d ■s •3 1 m" If ■a s "3 -n a o 1 "" o £ o o -a o p. 9 205 72 7,esj 3,911 4,752 1,210 13, 060 2, 270 165 3!J0 2, 424 5,374 053 4, 479 7,595 1,615 3, 603 569 102 731 17 753 47 8 6 21 304 7 237 60 1,188 134 16 4,526 4,788 556 3,776 2, 490 1,517 3,462 30 972 922 739 3,503 555 403 453 309 298 744 43 60 99 126 541 15S 1,143 68 146 269 131 417 10, 637 12, 606 13, 358 10, 702 15, 935 13, 183 12, 410 24, 805 2,335 16, 263 8,442 31, 399 4,069 7,569 10, 579 5,852 4,013 530 13,134 10, 880 21, 329 10,675 26, 092 37, 437 12, 709 4, 952 19, 537 10, 906 8,399 22, 176 15, 975 15, 650 49, 502 10, 770 9,995 6, 753 17, 388 14, 983 12, 323 8, 540 9,769 8, 044 8,107 10, 068 37, 325 12, 370 11, 353 15, 225 16, 551 9,659 14, 115 5,029 13, 427 10, 3U5 21, 037 2,130 41, 318 5,806 11,055 9,371 37, 1'.IO 17, 460 $20, 721 25, 906 15, 076 10, 222 43, 455 24, 141 13, 447 23, 713 3,058 18, 096 9, 415 16, 334 16, 717 8,717 27, 968 15, 174 28, 891 1,380 7,988 34, 106 53, 9ee 23, 994 20, 483 11,613 23, 249 13, 106 37, 435 16,421 15, 179 11,883 7,007 23, 614 18, 804 7, 437 11, 103 0, 325 19, G03 5,807 53, 174 26, 718 19, 270 3,950 10, 708 25, 368 19, 027 23, 508 19, 007 9,584 21, 603 8,353 17, 938 ■ 7,094 6, OdU 7, 210 15, 528 9,456 40, 002 11,413 17, 931 26, 193 20, 015 8,667 S74 "^^T 1 1 83 86 94 207 118 166 189 20 117 104 40 96 82 73 123 105 35 59 70 104 347 138 53 46 84 76 201 43 64 250 110 48 113 57 54 119 65 185 83 85 43 61 148 48 164 95 194 155 69 131 21 615 108 39 60 80 68 43 58 31 64 604 277 924 282 174 423 387 532 160 074 710 737 375 984 698 042 204 312 745 681 803 816 873 344 268 358 446 637 367 660 331 066 062 855 063 971 009 047 970 404 547 193 579 560 142 485 323 648 933 7G0 303 258 OH 342 439 588 980 512 719 8;i3 T 4 470 13 140 3,852 255 4,690 9,930 198 2,743 37 2,398 583 807 137 203 6,049 311 71 383 435 50G 1, 2C4 11, 533 479 2,264 5,182 10,922 331 701 18 255 2,870 296 2, 042 2,656 1,203 25 788 2,981 895 502 10, 395 218 243 83 2,228 2,503 3,470 95 103 1,612 5 8 6 7 836 10 11 R 745 865 1,312 11, 007 2,487 953 ■ 5, 698 1,261 75 355 1,770 15, 181 5.144 4,078 1,507 6,107 3,625 325 1,723 9 311 200 100 1, 978 3,352 3,892 2,396 in 50 11 !■> 20 13 14 3,211 935 61 1,035 191 17, 245 15 16 C03 1, 000 405 21, 401 36,176, 1, fc'o 3, i:;3 0, on; 11, 209 245 3,786 i.tso 3,128 5,935 4, 450 1, 270 8, 523 £83 990 650 11, 51] 1, 603 G5 18, 'JI7 33,'**4G. 815 1, CSo 6,140 e, 185 1,000 6,617 5 4 6 617 2,062 38 94 248 505 1 292 248 233 286 45 65 488 6 11 12 491 11 2 661 730 17 102 248 15 260 17 1 18 5;9 1,863 083 428 2, 052 795 318 1,125 511 409 824 135 453 2,827 475 307 350 603 338 5S0 551 275 312 263 184 3,024 40 460 534 677 286 914 203 303 23 947 2, 814 306 613 675 2, 013 307 19 2,0 59 12 25 150 -J 23 21, 633 904 558 23 24 1, 429 3,346 86 1,186 10, 7:11 60 4,793 1,455 291 20 50 "fi 1 47 2 27 28 50 30 4,446 4,830 20 10, 001 4,805 2,675 5 1,898 2,351 6,628 6 15, 3C8 1,331 2,062 39 30 1 504 31 " 1 17 32 j 33 123 1 31 ! 35 36 24, 87J. 1,530 2,035 5 37 1,943 38 39 / 10 / 639 1,984 2,174 1,041 1,606 40 +1 43 43 6,159 6,240 16, 765 280 44 40 45 1,259 4,512 273 079 931 1,083 3,507 1,389 95 12, 825 321 5, 552 181 8,851 23, 155 1,533 3,357 46 47 48 104 2,610 1,093 5,110 3, 3.::j 15J 96o 5,811 115 15 171 196 145 15 434 2,935 49 51 100 1,711 1,762 1, 237 381 4,301 365 5,106 645 520 4, 274 8, G2!i 4, 349 264 335 730 401 125 394 147 4,820 51 fi'\^ 51 56 6, 270 5,162 15, 273 6, 253 1, 12U 741 180 491 G13 329 11 13 57 58 r/i 5 10 60 406 2,558 61 22 63 G2 STATE OF KENTUCKY. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. ACRES OP LAND. S 5S LIVE STOCK. 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 00 91 92 9li 94 93 9() 97 98 99 100 101 1U2 103 104 105 lOG 107 108 109 Lincoln..' Livingston . . . Logan Lyon McCrackcu .- McLean Madiijon MagofSn Marion Marshall Mason Meade Mercer Metoalfe Monroe Montgomery. Morgan Muhlenburg . Nelson , Nicholas Ohio Oldham Owen Owsley , Pendleton Perry , Pike Powell Pulaski Rock Castle . . Rowan Russell Scott Shelby Simpson Spencer Taylor Todd Trigg Trimble Union Warren Washington . . Wayne Webster Whitley Woodford.... 104, 469 34, 653 130, 144 25, 703 29, 073 32, 577 192, 210 17, 963 103, 278 35, 439 128, 300 65, 603 110, 957 45, 406 50, 947 96, 405 53, 246 65, 850 118, 211 101, 990 81, 900 63, 175 98, 678 26, 277 60, 045 18, 754 22,327 13, 073 108,828 31, 656 17, 356 36, 805 162, 277 198, 664 64, 159 75, 339 56, 580 91, 915 61, 580 43, 624 72, 508 134, 892 139, 574 78, 620 42, 832 40, 495 108, 327 7, 644, 208 58,612 90, 416 156, 656 64, 533 76, 619 65, 686 95, 211 146, 025 111, 681 89, 787 26, 283 99, 936 40, 556 74, 722 108, 129 36, 718 261, 341 180, 349 102, 302 34, IM) 219, 012 31, 331 88, 961 231, 160 70, 632 301, 564 277, 470 41, 291 193, 062 96, 886 64, 900 80, 182 3,039 29,074 63, 689 42, 660 78, 072 116, 330 131, 543 36, 590 lai, 463 160, 366 49, 103 199, 621 93, 584 260, 776 11, 519, 053 $3, 993, 899 1,283,874 5, 743, 925 920,232 1, 602, 478 1, 172, 833 7, 346, 990 392, 353 3, 307, 066 999, 606 6, C05, 997 1, 937, 357 4, 376, 120 902, 722 1, 082, 376 .3, 915, 305 1, 094, 821 1,848,084 5, 047, 877 3, 377, 294 2, 128, 143 2, 706, 690 2, 284, 137 760, 213 1, 956, 278 419, 338 537, 098 273, 326 2, 032, 640 505, 252 281, 57G 824, 714 6, 793, 203 9, 831, 836 2,514,577 2, 704, 902 910, 917 4, 316, 261 1, 966, 460 1, 378, 122 4, 147, 800 6, 268, 412 3, 718, 324 1, 929, 375 1, 232, 375 338, 607 6, 642, 240 ?54, 509 50, 785 180, 934 39, 544 47, 624 47, 693 105, 074 8,595 79, 609 43, 798 138, 367 69, 103 103, 252 42, 179 43, 914 57, 693 20, 199 69, 950 124, 796 75, 909 97, 775 81, 709 68, 469 14, 649 52, 987 11,431 11, 097 8,153 78, 551 23, 166 7,559 29, 185 119, 886 200, 908 77, 383 80, 030 41, 001 106, 215 73, 294 44, 261 143, 700 142, 495 92, 484 49, 715 53, 566 28, 724 154, 875 291, 496, 955 7, 474, 573 4,116 1,796 4,749 1,339 1,488 1,716 9,454 869 5,909 1,936 6,536 2,688 5,631 2,607 2,681 4,774 1,964 3,160 5,839 5,885 4,455 2,373 4,904 997 3,530 788 1,201 555 4,069 1,466 642 1,628 6,170 8,103 3,584 3,515 2,341 3,121 2,655 2,401 3,957 6,403 5,845 2,566 2,097 1,748 5,415 355, 704 3,780 418 2,732 540 714 271 5,496 108 2,027 393 1,846 357 2,284 503 384 2,741 134 987 1,883 1,924 563 271 547 71 217 53 31 47 1,021 270 43 234 3,441 2,685 795 974 339 2,210 1,489 284 822 ■2,569 1,851 1,050 485 243 2,043 2,952 1,951 3,979 1,149 1,502 1, 493 4,995 1,157 3,021 1,609 3,747 2,122 3,131 1,918 1, 991 2,523 2,286 2,794 4,252 2,779 3,540 2,195 5,999 1,331 2,489 1,541 2,034 523 4,127 1,366 615 1,483 3,843 4,929 1,978 2,072 1,956 2,403 2,055 1,633 3,408 4,280 3,217 2,672 l.KiG 2,510 2,695 269, 215 1,277 1,246 814 811 661 705 2,312 516 1,326 1,143 587 1,119 659 911 1,077 1,311 1,390 1,301 667 666 2,275 262 1,498 728 667 678 1,090 265 2,330 665 373 1,039 1,257 738 571 207 592 560 1,212 299 1,597 2,020 1,057 1,450 1,125 1,374 663 108, 999 7,915 2,438 4,519 2,239 2,060 2,144 10,639 2,236 5,726 2,168 6,372 3,331 4,396 2,518 3,264 7,196 3,376 5,179 8,046 5,691 8,124 3,592 5,097 2,218 4,493 3,187 3,792 842 5,585 2,330 1,004 2,106 6,633 10, 239 3,047 3,808 3,206 3,639 3,465 2,459 7,483 7,599 5,118 5, 165 2,912 4,000 5,552 457,845 ■12,714 5,331 16, 120 3,326 3,002 4,149 14, 886 3,543 13,244 4,850 10,501 6,688 10,588 7,798 10,144 9,673 10, 391 9,235 13, 171 8,957 14,247 9,694 13,458 5,770 7,725 6,015 7,830 1,751 22,007 6,531 2,87G 5,950 12,529 21,262 7,913 5,821 9,330 9,097 6,814 4,060 10, lie 19, 575 11,466 10,231 5,324 8,364 11,815 938,990 STATE OF KENTUCKY. 63 AGRICULTURE. UVU STOCK. PRODUCED. s •-• 'T CO 20,463 l.'i, 356 40,ar!6 11, 198 11,86D 15, 567 44, 628 7,585 27, 590 13, 280 33,050 24,568 31, .591 11, 374 14, 375 19, 556 16,233 20, 573 40, 664 26, 914 30,202 14, 224 30,627 10, 442 24, 008 13,302 14,344 3,279 25,524 10, .500 4,279 13,071 25, 875 53,551 21, 577 26,535 15, 799 27, 870 21,273 12, 949 39, 805 40,253 32,266 11,767 16,549 16,045 22, 991 $1,076,756 331, 474 1, 003, 228 £63,527 262, 970 264, 479 1, 938, 858 126, 212 780, ,')88 274, 660 1, 048, 656 404,333 940, 957 366, 025 352, 070 938, 266 288, 782 520, 641 1, 006, 418 942, 938 649,846 495, 000 724, 509 146, 712 484, 265 148, 622 206, 781 99, 181 675, 750 233, 053 128,286 252, C44 1, 339, 454 1, 465, 01^ 4f», 033 547, 291 340, 276 593, 882 514, 242 345, 355 802, 680 1, 087, 202 1, 009, 356 460, 443 309, 029 257, 375 1, 058, 522 ,55, 840 41, 969 113, 609 15,854 33, 551 22, 946 93,644 7,857 75, 581 27,929 287,^493 96, .345 115, 849 24, 434 26,467 56, 418 23,582 29, 441 144, 176 10,5, 354 43, 694 103, 755 121, 698 12,683 83,598 6,437 16, 792 4,650 82, 640 16, 9,54 5,220 20, 785 160, 165 254, 189 51, 972 118, 240 25,672 137, 588 31, 911 63, 556 109, 218 115, 619 78,663 48, 322 19, 618 18,244 182, 951 33,538 443 5,400 ail 1,847 416 63,445 570 23, 056 790 22, 657 5,501 33, 165 624 1,523 25,341 3,065 1,186 23, 5C2 22, 066 1,223 5,090 13, 0.55 2,079 20, 688 187 208 473 4,564 1,078 629 751 12, 992 82, 999 943 26, 568 1,285 1,341 819 .5, 781 860 5,820 45, 142 5,989 260 3,338 15, 441 710, 845 415, 293 1, 114, 065 288, 755 302, 915 319, 405 1,354,703 165, 325 952, 763 304, 335 1, 076, 096 523, 940 839, 750 305, 645 344, 451 735, 936 390, 968 512, 685 9.32, 717 839, 100 748, 296 4,33, 135 833, 049 289, 398 654, 315 164,592 286, 611 136, 985 693, 418 265, 605 124, 3C8 313, 195 1, 106, 195 1, 622, 7iq 594, 955 618, 730 405, 117 735, 652 555, 055 304, 040 1, 132, 900 1, 176, 471 907, 3U 495, 960 432, 446 330, 673 758, 065 63, 970 2,224 84, 093 1,851 3,200 8,450 156, 545 10, 815 70,904 1,727 40, 024 71, 216 74, 392 32, 024 21, 575 80,324 28,187 13, 269 80,261 103, 771 28, 966 44, 345 34,927 8,854 40, 060 2,715 12, 218 4,079 74, 863 10, 797 9,073 6,874 191, 821 145, 785 51, 188 49, 916 25, 012 35, 424 13, 660 20, 913 14, 120 83,329 66,453 37, 385 9,022 10, 255 114, 970 30 822, 522 3, 926, 818 1, 156, 326 1, 137, 228 1, 623, 428 63, 935 5,183 138, 060 1,042,270 1, 738, 658 497, 442 9,618 772, 910 667, 362 4,105 20, 614 1, 597, 356 1,390 396, 468 2, 927, 084 202, 770 2, 153, 307 9,971 413, 070 6,962 13,518 10, 860 39, 305 11, 265 10, 346 236, 102 249, 100 1, 641, 025 400 1, 388, 161 4, 964, 796 3, 776, 688 697,043 2, 051, 000 2, 753, 473 19, 260 24, 271 2, 455, 245 17, 812 200 2.^, 816 8,979 30,862 5, 1.30 4,964 8,998 54,225 6,709 27, 611 10, 896 33, 424 17, 819 ■35, 318 13, 778 16, 343 28,247 21,827 15,965 32, 965 23, 767 26, 747 27, 136 32, 617 8,455 16, 946 11, 395 14, 498 4,288 33, 879 9,453 6,273 1,896 55, 701 69, 008 14, 991 13, 457 15, 741 21, 954 1,537 13, 218 22, 025 38,451 28,422 21, 758 10, 806 20, 538 48, 014 2,107 837 2,611 095 ,554 610 8,915 1,357 6,233 071 1,749 945 2,557 1,976 3,389 2,829 1,917 2,361 2,902 1,121 368 1,348 6,568 292 37, 851 6,106 910 806 3,703 2, 052 1,598 1,812 2,871 2,071 809 737 1,938 1,503 3,890 4,085 1,860 2,032 770 601 4,008 4,672 10, 670 16, 219 15, 240 6,683 14, 120 5,001 25, 362 7,813 17, 425 7,672 23,302 21, 072 13, 987 5,524 9.537 14, 000 15, 929 9,596 20, 166 13, 814 16, 189 9,536 20, 176 11, 100 23, 862 10, 426 14,189 3,105 24, 647 7,405 5,289 9,156 22, 470 22,541 9,680 8,573 7,936 12, 221 9,291 11, 061 21, 089 19,246 13,196 11, 866 5,147 16, 881 26, 396 5,868 9,116 26, 680 6,675 8,735 5,744 12,362 3,143 12, 113. 13,258 5,141 4,839 8,008 9, 6H5 14,525 3,835 5,727 14, 336 8,012 1,254 10, 343 4,115 3,809 5,269 2,407 3,396 13, 909 723 30, 103 3,989 2,599 7,898 2,722 8,183 21, 360 2,516 13, 050 20,461 15, 840 4,473 13, 897 30,880 6,828 16, 536 7,175 15, 210 4,094 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 °2 83 84 83 86 87 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 lOO lOl 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 S, 330, 593 61, 868, 237 7, 394, 809 1,055,260 64, 043, 633 108,126,840 2, 329, 105 1, 756, 531 1, 037, 537 Gi STATE OF KENTUCKY. AGEIOULTURE. 63 C4 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 73 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 TOO 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 COUNTIES. Lincoln Livingston . - . Logan Lyon McCracken . . . McLeuu Madison Magoffin Marion Marshall Mason Meade Mercer Metcalfe Monroe Montgomery. Morgan Muhlenburg . Nelson Nicholas Ohio Oldham Owen Owsley Pendleton . . . Perry Pike Powell Pulaski Rock Castlo . Rowan Russell Scott Shelby Simpson Spencer Taylor Todd Trigg Trimble Union "WaiTen Washington . "Wayne Webster Whitley Woodford... PRODUCED. 73, 001 10 11, 044 1,071 122 8 140 25 15 3, 8S0 3 2,230 6,045 197 2,107 723 030 50 804 lOG 235 18 10 19 27 3 289 171 1, 492 57 51 393 266 40 19 SO 222 142 294 42 53 13 53 421 43 45 78S 581 93 20 10 96 399 110 109 79 219 18,928 $5,624 3,967 2,147 100 3,345 2,554 16, 128 1,089 3,173 4,731 10, 635 11,418 9,788 1,871 10, 039 5,094 3,242 13, 391 8,820 2,359 12, 910 3,125 1,431 3,922 1,662 3,342 1,497 4,615 2, 315 2,087 4,930 3,676 12, 730 3,963 6,445 237 400 5,518 563 625 4,945 4,638 2,916 643 20 2,277 604, 849 173 32 2,429 159 420 80 12 2,630 20 80 7,103 40 580 140 25 1,007 1,171 363 140 135 1,483 338 326 ■3-3 6, 826 179, 948 $10 77 5,305 6,625 740 1,512 17, 103 1,900 4,C06 53 227 194 1,200 53 1S5 1,700 15 285 5,205 1 1,503 1,170 810 950 12 1,112 210 1,446 558 14 24 458, 245 87, 039 70, 438 133, 919 45, 482 51, 700 68, 321 246, 573 26, 923 136,813 74, 468 243, 001 95, 454 159, 928 73, 470 68, 420 115, 733 lis, 015 93, 062 173, 939 139, 293 123, 139 107, 580 128, 509 50, 135 171, 250 46, 137 77, 376 23,540 161, 979 63,936 20, 237 55, 455 101, 023 357, 844 92, 914 94, 576 69, 471 103,323 88, 968 88,087 180, 040 174, 007 144, 252 104, 475 54, 176 126, 086 176, 640 11, 71G, 609 6,795 360 266 12, 730 25 1,895 320 4,080 330 4,417 25 1,343 3, 374 1,052 216 3,707 4,185 809 130 1,423 85 1,686 395 643 151 429 5,573 3,800 320 2,705 365 200 40 2,032 2,066 1,987 80 600 1,581 2,088 1,134 1,642 5C4 595 1, 099 3,695 139 2, 4n.T 364 4, 229 1,486 3,206 893 325 1,360 853 1,610 3,762 1,402 2,426 1,425 2,084 122 1,535 5 180 128 1,091 367 254 56 1,715 3,040 723 1,678 533 921 561 1,159 2,901 1,829 1,753 361 585 305 1,622 158,476 55 2 102 460 17 24 199 2,308 208 204 722 85 37 41 2,452 49 1,589 1,369 355 69 310 10 493 96 330 246 1,399 486 103 10, 260 640 32 28 10 92 110 32 173 977 622 145 423 200 48 1,950 175 1,428 239 419 37 15 62, 561 21 171 3 4 2,641 43 216 4 85 5 74 7 7 10 6 8 11 38 19 50 40 4 15 3 5,899 STATE OF KENTUCKY. 65 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. ■s ! t g ■a m ■a a 1 HEMP. o 1 •s" S i is 1 s 1 ■s a.- si t h 11 1 I'" o I i n (fH* O 1 § a •2 1^ aoi 5 10,810 567 2,838 500 338 3,880 705 4,213 280 935 103 438 50 3,220 2,522 2,924 425 493 284 533 221 368 435 1,349 706 869 405 234 303 435 143 494 840 677 427 628 169 563 258 327 606 577 2,797 4,171 383 988 554 248 1,081 30 656 352 45 281 301 535 630 170 471 523 1,214 273 2,485 343 19, 330 6,840 9,370 3,665 3,310 11, 389 36,410 10,577 20,720 7,358 23,726 5,582 22,009 0,955 9,665 17, 573 19, 886 12,533 18, 534 15,280 17, 114 5,870 24,894 15, 937 840 109,805 99, 095 12, 885 24, 780 14,386 4,352 14, 888 16, 642 25,805 5,572 11, 615 8,003 6,095 11, 717 10, 368 23,965 15, 947 33,832 26,309 8,370 32, 189 13,858 $19, 677 13,467 38,221 5,998 5,309 19,027 35, 120 8,103 26,547 16,597 20,208 13,410 18,140 10, 312 28,226 14,-342 26,836 23,346 23,481 16, 639 24, 780 7,215 23,924 15, 211 13,832 14, 993 26,904 6,979 49, 675 18,489 7,646 18, 927 16,699 32,506 24, 061 11,152 18, 348 20,435 15, 631 6,983 25, 075 50, 350 25,980 40,014 13,812 36, 478 16,241 $97,338 84,592 267, 296 65, £84 60,602 60,242 197,590 24,849 142, 945 68,284 188,465 87,678 129,415 57,358 68,610 100,409 68,727 99, 149 168,936 116, 310 159, 967 71,560 119, 382 53,122 87, 065 51, 120 56, 102 17,463 150,486 48,125 17,837 78,763 151,020 203, 684 119,764 97, 648 70, 500 162,816 133,578 59,743 246, 420 214,944 134,691 117,213 79,332 71, 882 114, 908 6? 6n 115 6" 15 2,075 18,915 4,256 14, 079 375 79 691 278 968 8 4 137 243 141 910 188 837 150 577 9 286 170 25 203 19 357 254 47 1,423 252 114 456 6 205 104 205 659 40 611 13,510 4,431 1,208 702 1,703 126 3,599 4,782 4,903 5,557 10,4Tr 3,821 2,202 3, 446 3,846 657 3,468 7,413 2,438 6,141 4,927 1,717 18, 606 6,032 1,107 4,428 4,900 1,770 400 2,925 3,290 127 2,280 285 417 51 1,657 84 809 16 745 1,620 1,098 760 981 702 742 349 989 58 205 8,279 4,869 4,474 994 26 1,317 6,002 8,307 7,971 5,932 27,107 1,567 3,525 11,089 6,770 50 4,001 6,177 4,096 616 3,501 6,138 33, 164 8,788 63 5,638 2,312 1,175 471 268 2,398 6H 2 m 70 71 70 283 7T 2 4,374 5,575 19,905 11,979 7,556 8,688 3,350 10,381 651 25,393 2,635 768 6,350 940 18,665 13,406 1,637 109, 552 10,736 1,475 8,554 70 4,580 10,850 2,130 9,221 74 56 7'i 76 100 77 1,601 675 78 79 20 35 80 14 81 4 fi9 HI 2 400 84 3 m R6 87 156 35 m 1 m in 31 383 4,353 298 2,595 1,846 25 427 457 91 9^ 93 94 10 9"! 236 11 9f 97 5 1 98 99 ion 2,645 3,401 100 987 4,262 12,753 50 6,858 135 22 919 65 361 101 ^ 793 29 Iflo im 3,885 15, 753 11,203 2,651 14,872 2,735 602 728 630 49 2.T3 510 45 477 733 22 827 5,736 10,828 75 3,540 391 lO't 10*i 107 1 203 2 1 803 109 33,039 2,026 4,344 728,234 28,875 340 380, 941 140, 076 356, 705 68,339 1,768,692 2,095,578 11,640,738 66 STATE OF LOUISIANA. AGRICULTURE. ACRES OF LAND. PARISHES. ft ^ I LIVE STOCK. I ^ S 3 o 10 T 11 12 »13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 * 23 23 24 • 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 ■• 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 • 43 44 • 45 46 47 48 Ascension Assumption Avoyelles Baton Rouge, East. . . Baton Rouge, West . . Bienville* Bossier Caddo Calcasieu CaldvireU Carroll Cataboula Claiborne f. Concordia Do Soto .*... Feliciana, East Feliciana, West Franklin Iberville Jackson ! Jefferson Lafayette Lafourche Livingston Madison Morcliouse Natchitoches ! . . Orleans Ouichita Plaquemines Point Coupee Rapides t- Sabine St. Bernard* St. Charles St. Helena. -- St. James St. John Baptist St. Landry.*, St. Martin's St. Mary's St. Tammany Tensas ..A Terre Bonne Union . . .*. , Vermillion Washington Winn Total. 42, 666 57, 886 58, 078 55, 220 32, 044 109, 213 93, 520 243, 664 127, 401 52,833 $6, 253, 790 7, 013, 350 5, 175, 358 2, 588, 300 3, 650, 210 700, 319 238, 787 .592, 848 1,106,250 1,234 1,699 3,032 2,030 847 2,450 2,577 1,754 1,941 1,650 1,372 1,748 5,089 4,280 985 735 887 1,377 1,277 482 91, 583 98,928 8,621 21, 468 118, 116 54,413 114, 699 87, 406 96, 591 96, 728 71, 539 34, 138 62, 523 70, 873 24, 148 111, 375 40, 555 10, 537 104, 383 52, 988 80, 616 5,749 25,881 28, 975 82,932 105, 839 26, 350 220, 772 208, 472 28, 781 86, 872 175, 994 188, 546 389, 738 158, 523 282,354 124, 316 105, 801 127, 655 131, 688 215, 002 50, 269 52, 432 89,542 95, 683 172, 642 150, 032 276, 626 19, 715 96, 447 61, 469 169, 025 331, 117 86,171 29, 969 37, 458 45, 166 32, 481 93, 292 42, 870 78, 389 6,126 117, 355 38, 816 82, 791 85, 753 22, 177 20, 617 54, 594 202, 576 63, 885 40, .505 221, 340 170, Oil 210, 481 59, 532 236, 675 158, 806 210, 684 5,601 148, 845 85, 618 2, 707, 108 6,591,468 4, 657, 057 3, 843, 015 236, 920 1,TO1,075 15, 008^ 712 5, 693, 255 2, 775, 080 12,335,720 2, 546, 987 2, 218, 878 2, 244, 516 1, 674, 572 12, 661, 190 1, 343, 760 2, 682, 080 1, 224, 630 4, 104, 100 317, 038 11, 640, 660 5, 505, 285 5, 059-, 293 1, 301, 000 2, 323, 633 2, 791, 700 8, 815, 520 9, 340, 611 414, 746 228, 991 110, 476 41, 675 87, 266 596, 883 149, 160 215, 303 837, ,310 78, 357 213, 965 345,725 69, 682 886, 719 90, 799 55, 060 124, 635 568, 292 28, 250 364, 920 143, 472 99, 815 77,050 97, 489 161, 000 2, 113, 835 1,092,340 43, 327 1,167 1,430 2,180 2,501 2,249 112 4,629 3,749 3,042 1,493 1,145 1,016 2,035 2,339 1,941 1,500 1,596 1,630 1,273 1,355 1,532 1,325 388 6,087 962 844 1,346 1,307 2,837 402 678 594 2,757 3,934 1,269 4,908 1,830 2,347 3,783 2,021 1,850 2,519 990 3,412 1,324 1,372 1,290 2,030 91 4,168 1,742 2,789 304 840 1,634 3,792 4,610 427 2,972 4,228 4,274 2,290 3,645 3,069 2,167 2,574 1,906 3,140 616 4,020 1,288 2,464 2,712 3,571 5,226 468 1,711 936 4,442 7,526 2,935 1,881 2,115 1,582 1,976 1,710 1,852 1,644 1,242 1,057 1,393 311 2,304 542 514 2,067 1,424 2,594 135 553 866 1,429 3,456 1,236 3, 261, 900 1, 460, 107 3, 557, 050 2, 592, 800 5,026,118 4, 850, 021 9, 737, 100 168, 261 15, 452, 763 7, 106, 390 1, 166, 836 412, 365 247, 720 488, 190 579, 795 80, 657 1, 361, 200 408, 250 314, 110 256, 027 1, 266, 695 4,323 728, 074 946, 733 115, 370 55,025 37, 602 46, 674 348 1,354 717 948 3,738 3,122 2,857 448 1,847 1,035 1,680 4,824 1,434 801 1,417 373 2,702 1,700 2,442 S,438 6,464 99 4,644 2,354 1,240 64 127 391 505 2,943 838 942 6,594 4,482 2,250 1,638 3,512 1,678 3,018 4,438 2,064 1,686 776 1,149 695 737 3,107 3,123 1,150 664 2,477 673 1,203 738 851 720 2,932 2,847 9,123 10, 457 1,669 7,563 12, 111 12,164 11,565 11,948 6,412 9,381 7,858 5,559 5,695 5,595 6,098 1,203 12, 604 1,571 5,026 8,762 8,849 11, 045 348 4,207 1,933 8,891 22,251 7,593 791 6,186 1,476 1,765 15,882 11, 707 16,382 4,528 8,685 2,366 7,731 17, 136 5,662 3,210 3,134 2,341 7,302 5,258 1,491 4,129 3,713 3,285 3,275 10, 176 3,320 4,800 6,234 4,848 2,965 4,060 4,140 815 6,926 944 1,515 3,485 2,754 7,745 894 1,926 1,208 6,325 11,980 1,662 1,239 3,375 1,640 1,279 14,457 7,203 9,751 2,247 5,717 1,682 5,688 190 3,302 -833 204,789,663 18,648,325 78, 703 91,762 129, 662 60, 358 326, 787 181,253 * No return. STATE OF LOUISIANA. 67 AGRICULTURE. LIVJJ STOCK. PRODUCED. 6 1 4 o > 1^ •i '3 .CI 1 ■i 1 1 1 1 .3 hi u 1— ( 1 O 1 o K o 1 1 S. £ 'd 2 3 in •C! O u t4 1 -s 1 6,150 $533,868 618, 210 556,505 470, 525 385,125 481,452 439,220 661, 595 395,350 204,870 1,000 68 S i P 60 3 n *« "a 14 LIVE STOCK. .9 1 ID a a g 2 a a & • i i 1 1 s < o o 1 o to a I o A 1 1 145, 186 124, 117 209, 555 191, 762 102, 724 285, 393 74, 537 119, 034 259, 64Q 243, 386 97, 674 70, 838 261,245 192, 237 83,728 243, 077 89, 055 326, 699 168, 144 174, 529 214,736 164, 960 68, 364 102, 538 314, 216 363, 839 138, 047 45, 728 271,093 160, 860 219, 393 201, 337 |I4, 990, 907 2,217,136 9, 470, 563 3, 643, 748 3, 022, 796 8,858,355 2,707,250 3, 960, 878 5, 615, 754 6,711,673 1,764,327 2,487,209 5, 729, 553 4, 516, 496 2,234,257 10, 757, 623 $180, 428 178, 182 280, 129 178, 525 98,010 375, 864 133, 122 138, 030 273, 548 371, 888 100, 896 75, 134 323, 945 240, 002 94, 590 262, 034 3,129 3,654 4,768 3,686 1,819 6,817 1,531 2,135 6,068 6,846 2,436 1,288 5,625 4,091 1,786 4,958 1 8 55 6 6 8 1 1 4 4 3 1 8 1 3 8,105 6,541 13,137 7,315 7,445 14, 664 4,806 7,117 13, 531 14, 034 4,811 3,719 11,252 9,444 6,306 15, 087 4,410 2,490 6,568 5,070 3,769 7,854 2,168 4,058 8,244 6,913 2,488 1,958 7,449 5,084 2,377 8,898 7,781 7,156 8,785 10,589 5,943 13, 197 4,157 6,569 18, 715 14,080 6,030 3,728 14, 611 9,908 5,674 13, 030 15, 155 18,043 16,377 48,462 26,167 43,552 18,651 15,501 48,006 40,617 18,634 o 3 4 Cumberland 'S 6 7 R (> Oxford in 11 T» 8,777 i n 76,001 34,873 13,581 22,075 1-1 "V^aldo 1^ ifi York Total 2, 704, 133 3, 023, 538 78, 688, 525 3,298,327 60,637 104 147, 314 79, 792 149, 887 458,478 AGRICULTURE, COUNTIES. 1 PRODUCED. o •1 •s 1 1 t o I 1 P.'g a I) ■g s 1 "S o P. s 1 ■s p. g 1 o 1 1 1 1 ° u I 3 1 1 1° OQ 5 "3 1 & 1 19, 861 16, 471 36, 574 30, 844 38, 136 151, 540 23,436 47,343 13, 338 113, 049 66, 661 18, 156 132, 916 51,226 16,889 31, 668 1,699 830, 442 1,091 4,848 1,340 4,099 949 789 20,135 35, 933 7,583 32 13, 004 7,837 9,019 720 $30,444 1,684 33, 574 46, 683 7,045 77,054 13,888 15, 795 84,465 33, 067 10, 735 7,070 42,880 40, 350 2,676 54,957 23 3 258' 96 79 562 63 212 426 785 $5, 703 830 36, 600 3,023 25, 193 17,201 12, 128 14, 313 19, 530 10, 688 590, 522 467, 301 1, 062, 512 549,278 615, 090 1, 228, 721 491, 174 599, 380 892,441 1,231,660 381,798 268,361 832, 746 807,355 568,750 1, 106, 686 250, 102 22,216 169,046 130,213 28,438 283, 655 61, 451 12,408 294,328 133,477 71,240 6,031 314, 438 54, 693 3,256 124, 870 50,438 39,267 86, 473 66,763 37, 189 107, 511 28,711 46,719 85,844 94,824 32,725 28,446 88, 744 65,307 33,861 83,591 1,199 957 11 9,884 256 389 10 559 83 3,808 74 135 2 34 1,767 276 79 7 304 143 18 23 1,000 38 210 11,633 252 2,388 33 68 85,326 715 500 fiO 88 634 39 115 2 3 4 Cumberland Franklin 5 Hancock 6 7 Knox g 2 7,671 336 36,872 5 1,069 853 1 4 9 Oxford 10 11 47 84 22 119 386 6,516 2,780 15, 110 7,634 16,757 13 14 Waldo 15 16 York Total 802, 108 239,519 501,767 3,164 194, 006 11,687,781 1,799 868 975, 803 48, 849 6,306 102,987 STATE OF MAINE 71 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PEODTJCBD. •s-g ■2 ° ■g « ft i 3,148 4,521 5,037 2,275 2,254 5,760 1,640 2,344 4,837 4,676 1,835 1,134 3,684 3,390 2,146 6,102 $822,209 765, 138 1,176,445 977, 136 644, 310 1, 637, 826 440, 117 603, 855 1, 458, 172 1, 605, 051 580, 041 328,162 1, 524, 684 973, 517 520, 558 1, 380, 312 9,066 24,763 18,884 23,644 7,030 8,821 3,540 1,362 37, 344 25,089 5,046 2,047 12,863 22,671 15, 206 16, 500 9,754 26, 714 8,841 4,543 758 6,726 6,293 3,776 30, 571 5,646 766 1,728 7,719 3,228 776 5,448 121, 049 3,265 165, 875 77, 000 17, 453 229,460 35, 402 50, 855 187, 714 121, 392 45, 443 27, 033 160, 455 94, 781 1,648 207, 246 141,326 419, 783 101, 925 217, 468 53,043 240, 077 29,765 41,602 251, 453 463, 080 300,835 23,541 404,231 282, 630 40, 876 77, 304 57 38 1,284 15 52, 402 61, 312 55,289 165, 950 81, 597 140, 802 44,622 48,050 142, 770 136, 454 61, 577 27,069 256, 436 119, 321 37, 957 63, 452 11, 594 18, 799 16, 511 12, 376 9,254 22,481 6,477 7,896 18, 107 32,680 13, 802 5,060 29, 063 19,312 4,810 18, 693 391, 321 411, 630 433, 655 306, 251 189, 101 565, 304 142, 806 199, 068 701, 022 845,625 334, 009 108, 507 637, 276 469, 612 201, 589 437, 841 64 1,098 30 54, 783 15, 437, 533 233, 876 123,287 1, 546, 071 2, 988, 939 1,583 1,495,060 246, 915 6, 374, 617 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. 1 i HEMP. DO O 1 P4 ■s •3 •s J i \ s § u 1 l| Is ■a i ° 11 o 1 1 ° !0 O 1 ■s" f o 1 1 ° II 1 S 1 if S. ■"• 1° 1 q 1 o 45 795 21 241 13 49 2,331 129, 875 5,393 7,695 735 3,344 659 1,644 81,923 8,015 5,864 251 31, 653 11, 314 2,657 13,389 611 606 636 13,827 77 2,445 30 232 32 443 1,003 559 728 107 135 939 1,499 420 42 1,741 465 266 158 8,275 3,219 12, 941 18,282 16, 986 25,636 2,479 4,275 25,846 84, 849 20,123 1,151 47, 751 28, 791 8,421 5,660 $12,684 45, 879 26,926 26,639 64,346 26,491 29,916 22,796 44, 907 44,667 16,037 12, 694 33,346 26, 969 31, 327 25,162 $168,532 171,176 215,007 123,801 120,388 286, 111 102,592 114, 154 218,798 361,849 88,312 58,274 204,561 169, 532 107, 888 269,204 ] S 46 20 5 1 . 165 ( 278 245 194 105 61 7 154 2 3 i 3,947 1,002 1,083 < 2 1 , 50 1 1 813 50 127 2 6,492 1,081 81 761 1. 1' 1 45 1 1 50 2,997 419 73 306,742 32, 679 8,769 314, 685 490, 786 2, 780, 179 72 STATE OF MAEYLAND, AGRIOULTUEE. COUNTIES. AGUES OF LAND. o o > i OS e P p. s a ss a ■a a LIVE STOCK. a ■f > 1 .9 1 •a 1 1 8 :§ g 1 o tS g o t 1 108,388 144,211 206,536 81, 301 61, 101 170, 353 141,776 106, 338 119, 445 271,998 1*, 051 110,657 132, 814 176; 790 182, 468 153, 113 114,459 118, 873 110,483 196,503 155, 609 180,817 100, 950 113, 021 55, 130 31, 606 67, 145 65, 420 76, 641 n-1, 482 67,345 80,860 54, 332 36, 614 114, 814 99, 235 62, 718 103, 062 150,322 55, 674 43, 637 160,479 $3,155,563 7,512,331 22,491,197 3,407,902 1, 222, 685 7,567,638 8,168,950 3,236,015 3, 669, 040. 14,127,925 7, 433, 740 4, 514, 648 6, 877, 390 5, 920, 318 10,421,108 5, 236, 080 4, 395, 135 4, 626, 241 5,774,848 11,954,803 4, 260, 120 $100,395 189,834 455,857 64, 354 30,315 271, 805 287, 988 89, 009 92, 423 441, 814 268, 546 139, 148 132, 655 314, 708 211, 97,1 146, 075 109, 908 91, 795 126,950 354, 938 90, 041 3,690 4,066 7,940 2,321 1,133 6,124 4,776 2,448 2,841 11,287 4,954 2,962 4,248 5,587 4,701 4,079 3,452 2,185 3,618 8,027 2,967 16 659 950 277 164 257 338 950 147 209 357 209 434 232 1,364 880 349 484 624 132 797 5,828 3,641 9,853 1,818 1,229 7,659 5,968 2,422 3,283 11, 180 6,167 3,100 3,604 5,202 3,887 3,830 3,447 3,068 3,563 6,841 3,873 243 2,668 765 2,176 558 109 1,862 2,712 S,870 135 1,797 650 1,092 900 3,441 1,807 3,025 2,734 1,455 6 3,519 7,062 3,545 6,018 2,424 1,577 4,962 7,669 4,495 6,671 10,237 7,347 2,273 5,132 5,761 4,855 5,031 4,673 5,896 4,254 11,424 7,948 15,479 7,267 6,193 4,111 1,218 5,088 6,493 5,740 6,540 10,389 6,305 4,223 7,563 10,487 8,828 7,618 5,668 7,220 7,207 10,460 11,668 o ^ 4 5 fi 7 CecU 8 q 10 Frederick 11 12 n Howard 14 15 16 Prince George's Queen Anne 17 18 10 Talbot "0 "1 Total 3,002,267 1,833,304 145, 973, 677 4, 010, 529 93,406 9,829 99,463 34, 524 119, 254 155,765 AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. 1 1. .3 1 r s o o a 1 a o 1 B n- 1 ■s g o 1 at •§ 1 i 1 o 1 i 1 o 3 1 1 SD i 1 1 Allfighany 2,809 77,350 $14,455 14, 135 25,279 177 1,418 10 $6,245 218, 680 236, 365 358, 572 79,504 489,817 54,321 46, 566 503, 059 409,788 48,006 106, 024 969, 797 364, 811 167, 124 182,410 278, 141 78, 629 146, 605 90,782 104, 729 120,202 550,898 115, 510 3,432 12,058 1,743 30, 164 740 113 22,988 18,003 459 234 32, 078 19,284 6,801 3,311 13,167 6,328 1,152 923 40 794 21,352 12 87 68 852 2 72 264 3 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 12 13 14 15 16 ' 2,451 23,492 15 8 17, 363 36, 049 122 65 2,869 39,547 4,441 912 6,860 43 200 27 327 351 2,256 41 567 250 586 20 92 198 Calvert Caroline , 115 1,130 1,300 24 585 1,333 5,693 120 13, 655 30,483 1,680 75 6,416 3,755 2,507 60 Carroll 65 1,307 5 8 2,920 7, ,348 5,604 11 396 256 2 134 10 Cecil 26,405 3,045 4,872 11, 064 8,201 5,507 85,227 3,227 5,370 1,867 8,306 6,424 6,199 20, 656 362 Charles 81 68 6.346 460 60 132 125 10 80 45 50 3,352 94 23 315 128 263- 500 30 330 200 1,050 70 9,631 4,650 1,341 33 3,735 58 25 476 563 119 57 175 138 688 197 56 650 8 13 211 59 151 72 Harford Prince George'a Queen Anne I 17 Saint Mary's 190 1ft Somerset 19 Talbot 111 935 60 6,306 53 422 90 ■Wafihington 9] Worcester 52 Total - 17, 350 212, 338 252, 196 3,222 530,221 5,265,295 8,342 191, 744 39,811 3,195 2,943 .. , STATE OF MARYLAND 73 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PEODUCBD. i 'i ■s 1 1 1 o If 1 1 1 1 i •i f o a i o ■s so 1 1 1 i H §"3 3 m a i '3 1 I ■s 3 a* 1 9,975 $513,281 616, 267 l,303,8p 380, 338 155, 113 784, 34C 877,563 439,283 458,091 1,534,048 878,736 455,964 699, 502 852, 767 875,317 627, 447 546, 046 466, 892 601, 861 1,056,125 544,993 87,715 221,389 286, 351 117, 119 57,344 323,996 326, 667 151,532 218, 422 976^143 224,808 151, 956 312, 101 341, 087 312^,796 291, 656 296,703 138, 404 343, 514 882,514 40,9^ 73,224 8,150 59, 831 1,420 11, 276 63,629 161, 075 630,243 1,028,143 272, 084 247, 455 ."588. 725 136, 638 64,612 372, 268 38,732 36,227 346, 901 504, 058 53, 171 43, 002 272, 082 330, 355 164, 193 503, 330 222, 674 98, 073 167, 155 79,202 134,274 47, 418 175,445 169,488 2,000 6,039,910 8,545 6,204,524 35, 315 25, 431 11, 028 14,357 3,465 13, 295 24,460 14, 843 16,842 31, 650 18, 509 15,377 28,080 38, 674 27,008 31, 091 18, 232 19, 191 33, 803 47,133 23,727 246 14, 178 3,352 787 108 771 321 655 1,118 326 1,524 6,')9 1,953 1,019 1,567 635 1,141 2,422 114 47 1, 464 107, 148 33, 689 132, 355 9,531 19, 320 71,925 107, 650 11, 768 41,458 94,043 105, 759 59, 440 52,741 109, 745 29, 974 44, 046 26, 178 31, 637 55,730 65,816 54, 476 25 668 2,329 4,892 15,343 1,832 2,708 3,092 35,282 1,339 1,286 94 3,824 360 962 12,292 8,906 76,430 20,940 550 44,286 1 16,402 o 25,280 S 10, 479 4 4,951 5 23,740 608, 424 6 10,968 4, 304 788, 044 2, 127 319. 272 7 12, 828 4, 693, 961 R 18, 749 3,106 94, 251 13, 183 21, 573 1,236 27,036 24,234 29, 941 165 220 1,708 77, 993 294 687,324 1, 082, 903 735, 573 425, 727 888, 900 686, 843 699,144 876, 405 437, 366 606,733 679,571 669, 322 934,070 9 40, 548 387, 100 10 16, 725 11 15, 626 400,266 19, 11, 346 13 22,823 843, 300 13, 446, 550 14 25,927 15 14, 848 16 21, 728 5, 774, 975 260 1,100 50 17 19, 236 15, 691 29, 425 20 461 18 19 90 91 387, 756 14, 667, 853 6,103,480 518, 901 13,444,922 3,959,298 38, 410, 965 491, 511 34, 407 1,264,429 236, 740 > AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. o I t ■3 ■f a *5 HEMP. o i ■s ■s % 1 1 1 CO •a in 1 ID 1 ■3 ^ . If Is OQ O « r-T i . r tlD m 1 f a I 1 1 = II 1 1 P 1 if o 1,814 772 63,281 2,273 736 23,159 1,.400 3,158 5,897 1,485 4,603 1,728 3,634 14, 922 4,568 8,518 3,024 4,990 53, 003 1,440 1,440 4,605 16, 307 7,483 11, 510 16, 480 $9, 178 $88, 903 108, 863 179,136 62,216 36, 206 178, 897 142, 497 84, 938 118, .361 281,467 169, 133 91,205 107, 557 194, 186 90, 603 130,775 133,846 154, 082 122, 948 207, 034 138, 654 1 o 70 107 3 45 16 259 55 476 94 271 573 209 360 133 417 568 25 14 395 988 290 700 381 190 1,717 10 1,066 258 10, 108 1,846 1,478 1,174 707 112 12, 455 1 4 5 79 969 196 (] 862 7 8 14 369 8 q 5 21 21 in 10 ] 41 40 11 19 20 1,450 13 69 14 l.s 40 100 1,845 500 4 1 152 16 5,989 7,084 153 140 13, 338 17 2 IR 1 3 19 50 20 100 7,245 331 21 18 254 14, 481 1,570 3 63,281 907 2,404 6,960 193, 354 67, 003 2, 821, 510 10 74 STATE OF MASSACHUSETTS. AGRIOULTUEE. COUNTIES. ACEES OF LAND. o s Tt § ■S ■f- 3 i ■a > >^ a ST.. a> ■a .y LIVE STOCK. ^ ifi Barnstable Berkshire . Bristol Dukes Essex Franklin . . Hampden . Hampshire Middlesex Nantucket- Norfolk ... Plymouth . Suffolk Worcester. Total. 34, 336 300, 459 85, 804 23,033 141, 465 234, 723 190, 706 222, 448 248, 727 6,736 82,054 95, 669 3,279 487, 073 45, 736 146, 186 107, 237 9,430 43, 104 114, 882 94, 539 65, 659 135, 042 6,382 77, 045 114, 650 S37 223, 083 $2, 129, 156 9, 913, 857 6, 883, 141 609, 790 10, 330, 505 7, 569, 223 7,402,883 7, 730, 161 24, 39G, 129 166, 548 15,539,042 7, 620, 646 754, 600 22, 210, 267 685,095 330, 891 232, 884 15, 118 341, 384 234,427 266, 101 296,214 895, 059 12, 015 276, 108 185, 078 16, 710 717, 914 1,063 5,154 2,635 274 3,270 3,984 3,563 4,065 7,566 178 3,579 3,015 135 9,305 2,101 17,978 6,771 648 10,485 9,349 10,000 9,558 30, 119 531 7,912 6,405 274 32, 361 537 3,241 2,317 264 3,586 4,000 3,610 2,918 4,032 36 1,529 2,169 64 9,918 2, 155, 512 1, 183, 212 123,255,948 47, 786 144, 492 38, 221 1,928 13,518 3,433 810 4,314 12, 898 9,059 11, 110 9,609 258 2,384 3,544 124 24, 212 97,201 1,460 41,316 3,132 6,944 1,805 24,030 8,461 15,541 1,067 1,077 318 2,947 7 6,724 114, 829 AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. o 1 1 n 1 I'S 1 t o I S O ■S '^ r a g ■s f 1 o ■3 1 1 1 ! 3 i f ° 1 w 1 3,784 9,074 7,548 83 29, 760 3,246 1,578 1,858 17, 992 810 12, 062 5,461 854 40,781 195 42, 073 244 10 258 5,337 31, 271 10, 656 3,767 $2, 697 27,174 17,812 359 121,980 47,056 32, 520 44, 159 333, 055 30 83, 335 13, 965 10, 925 190, 452 279 662 465 «11, 851 10,567 39, 145 15 173,648 1,177 31,252 4,125 798, 261 5,283 216, 501 33, 944 27, 935 43, 919 99,923 1,361,705 233, 207 23,776 440,336 931, 539 789, 803 1,164,760 812,737 23,767 295,027 348,802 2,181 1,770,372 5,027 2,167,812 44,371 1,910 56, 632 236,654 421,992 318,113 49, 424 11, 521 83,875 28,897 2,520 56,363 58,965 47,846 54,752 97, 359 2,440 38,430 31,140 2,839 148,384 20 185 410 o Berkshire 153 191 88 318 8 109 107 40 25,845 4 Dukea. 1,690 721 1,566 390 3,459 317 72 684 150 1,855 fi 19,470 164 8 9 MidcUesex 38,396 10 Nantucket Tl Norfolk 319 110 1,083 12 124 10,454 20, 619 68, 989 26 45 3 38 68 i7,317 12 3 IS Suflfolk 28,962 1,902,547 268 1,088 Total 134,891 123,202 925, 519 20,915 1, 397, 623 "8, 297, 936 5,294,090 665,331 1,295 4,852 111,301 STATE OF MASSACHUSETTS. 75 AGRICULTURE. LITE STOCK. PRODUCED. 1 09 CM o 1 1 i a 1 1 .Q o ^ Cm O ■3 ■s •s o a a ■s 1 1 1=1 Bany 73, 503 2,567 75, 113 107, 871 195,511 114, 733 573 1,479 80, 548 457 72, 267 668 94, 451 89, 486 5,843 102, 542 103, 884 144, 302 106, 829 2,360 6,300 122, 779 1,722 92, 880 6,339 88, 017 2,825,235 134, 110 4, 730, 978 5, 118, 105 7, 529, 957 5, 351, 411 12, 787 70, 530 3, 580, 940 12, 170 3, 385, 669 21, 290 4, 569, 410 113, 888 8,110 135, 847 134, 353 334, 178 154, 049 538 4,895 128, 553 905 125, 204 953 170, 751 2,171 101 3,591 4,864 6,534 4,649 35 59 2,041 40 2,626 90 4,329 23 3,522 206 4,347 6,110 8,365 4,916 35 90 2,874 44 4,824 23 5,289 2,220 100 1,604 1,887 3,041 1,316 25 46 2,576 60 1,826 13 1,950 5,199 250 5,756 8,320 10,297 6,684 52 67 7,519 55 7,836 40 7,981 22,365 45 8,726 37,079 96,087 22,100 14 18 18,111 11 26,966 3 48,857 f] Bay 19 3 13 9 JO Cass n -|0 Chippewa 13 2 14 Delta 15 Eaton Ifi 17 2 18 Glftdwin* 19 on Grand Traverse Gratiot- 2,112 8,882 162, 872 1,551 3,595 76, 796 91, 144 7,802 34, 972 143, 655 16,281 16, 707 90, 000 105, 498 67,230 324, 237 7, 282, 172 106, 040 lat, 200 3, 566, 344 3, 891, 900 2,260 11, 312 274, 677 2,170 400 117, 707 163, 595 49 175 6,247 67 70 2,635 3,078 9 99 702 8,934 23 244 4,208 5,021 174 538 2,770 31 284 1,922 2,399 125 850 11, 620 76 279 5,929 6,487 21 602 67,643 Hillsdale 3 9,a Houghton 23 Huron 3 5 2 41 32,257 24,886 ^1 Ingham 9,fi Iosco* 07 Isabella 2,069 216, 211 153, 923 125, 529 84, 067 1,373 197, 073 130, 473 130, 056 320 12,123 169, 183 120, 600 153, 339 89, 946 8,366 147, 265 123, 690 104, 615 350 98, 100 8, 492, 459 8, 137, 368 6, 552, 452 3, 286, 909 65, Oil 9, 350, 796 4, 604, 860 6, 367, 273 6,000 5,726 251, 938 265, 160 200, 544 168, 860 3,205 329, 394 161, 463 296, 594 1,180 16 6,519 5,468 3,888 3,343 34 9,542 4,189 6,883 13 141 7,803 6,231 6,943 4,211 53 11,235 5,926 7,461 16 131 3,282 1,566 3,033 1,637 69 2,247 2,271 1,219 26 183 9,879 7,892 7,970 5,303 47 17, 995 7,919 8,286 35 75 107,336 56,058 22,786 27, 141 _ 10 89,929 56,290 49,355 40 14 18 3 7 'JO Kent... . •?1 Lapeer 33 Leelenau ?T 14 20 5 ?*! Macomb 3fi Manitou 37 Manistee* 3fi Marquette 882 160 908 646 1,806 93, 977 14,269 4,659 6,229 304, 509 2,997 2,845 220 37, 574 1,573 760 3,915 2,323 6,245 107, 650 20, 159 19, 893 10, 167 192, 625 35, 868 20,451 815 66, 296 64, 085 8,050 29, 400 16, 350 95, 700 4, 026, 965 517, 230 240,380 329,000 13, 624, 758 227, 770 163, 950 5,200 1, 724, 415 1,625 1,825 710 155 3,569 158, 638 22, 053 7,806 6,293 473, 464 3,602 7,530 30 4 22 23 46 6,111 309 99 97 12, 638 86 55 9 1,172 27 13 67 50 149 6,749 686 344 202 14, 302 153 66 8 2,914 15 14 39 10 136 1,512 412 238 144 3,136 231 63 8 1,308 23 20 62 48 109 9,484 759 346 190 17, 148 168 26 9 3,961 39 Mason 40 Mecosta 13 41 Michilimackinac 4^ 1 39 2 27 26,921 2,422 140 203 137, 382 11 1 43 Monroe 44 Montcalm 45 Muskegon 46 Newaygo 47 Oakland 42 48 Oceana 4Q Ontonagon 4 50 Osceola r>i Ottawa 57, 992 7 3,222 59 Presque Isle * ■13 Saginaw 18, 168 32, 157 16, 605 70 45, 276 156, 170 19, 035 _.. 66, 600 iL 251,104 128, 496 : 43,206 48, 785 30, 132 973 69, 472 111, 015 100,292 76, 270 154,184 *j^, 113' "^^ 666, 827 1, 659, 142 422, 790 42, COO 2, 085, 469 6, 652, 824 1, 015, 316 3, 052, 805 12, 234, 670 9,24i,897 55, 015 62, 540 15, 569 130 88, 493 249, 986 19, 881 107, 041 446, 438 , 318,008 746 1,883 612 1 9 1,684 2,117 1,046 5 3,111 6,099 1, 386 3,133 11,845 9,265 878 542 509 o 1,441 1, 258 1, CB2 1,614 3,336 1,180 2,615 2,523 1,132 7 4,413 7, .948 1,450 3,684 15, 682 11, 079 1,601 7,862 1,707 ^4 Saint Clair n5 5fi 'i? 1,876 5,332 412 2,138 9,787 8,135 1 24 21,344 28, 840 745 7, 358 171, 529 35, 743 nH ^q Tuscola - . Van Buren . - (ift 5 4 61 Washtenaw . . .^ Tutal r.' ' 3, 476, 296 3, 554, 538 160, 836, 495 5, 819, 832 t 136, 917 330 179, 543 61, 686 238, 615 1,271,743 No return. STATE OF MICPIIGAN, 77 AGEICULTURE. LlVJi STOCit PEODTJCED. 1 o (0 ! i 13 "3 □a 1 .a 1 o 1 o o "a P« Pi O 6< !i r o o 1 h V 3 Is 1 10,202 $497, 967 149,518 13, 051 264, 991 44, 198 655 26, 055 1,513 107, 939 3 3 4 8,672 207 461, 854 21, 993 566, 099 797, 086 1, 233, 006 665, 143 5,106 9,294 505, 657 5,300 547, 088 6,491 686, 872 229, 159 4,690 281, 739 292, 767 698, 456 422,481 113 50 152,696 65 81, 508 100 158, 063 9,908 1,670 1,716 10,222 12,782 3,276 64 240 5,750 235,305 4,705 456, 521 546, 467 616, 252 685, 842 319 64,812 3,995 81, 503 77, 642 186, 496 124, 871 1,792 4,285 88,827 2,370 76, 751 1,792 156, 165 61,283 1,799 47 658 2,243 3,728 1,108 315 650 2,300 43 2,830 46 9,841 86, 807 6,674 117,549 212, 001 214, 835 132, 865 4,597 9,760 59, 662 5,680 65, 052 7,090 99, 553 12 150 891 5 6 14, 864 20, 249 18, 206 115 5,825 26, 749 100, 397 299, 061 68,922 g 1 2,841 9 430 2,662 45 12 9,535 145 160, 449 ' 220 167,021 1,996 233,938 8 49, 817 9,584 276 7,232 15 11,833 42 2,510 91, 082 15 16 9 638 114 138, 685 212 17 18 22,107 50, 299 1,162,582 9,990 27,916 521, 342 600, 419 5,531 14,354 371, 358 100 6,243 159, 080 238, 480 436 806 23,509 20 957 7,433 13, 537 3,490 17, 937 809, 408 4,270 9,179 116, 007 4,030 5,504 101,233 100, 487 95 5 5,443 6,915 8,065 269, 322 6,830 13, 590 82, 121 69, 637 1,258 16, 030 1,766 215, 371 20 120 11, 700 65 22 23 153 2,926 229, 354 155, 171 90 3,459 2,495 40 30,781 31 6,973 7,561 150 86, 525 66, 410 11,451 1, 277, 645 996, 858 755, 719 563, 103 7,140 1, 517, 422 775, 233 906, 351 2,411 2,155 662, 404 594, 507 292, 594 160, 624 1,237 423, 843 277, 147 74, 826 200 685 19, 565 4,198 35, 591 18, 506 618 22, 892 40, 162 24,953 1,777 612, 499 585, 195 230, 715 178, 712 5,417 1, 213, 311 267, 136 327, 007 200 975 150, 368 151,317 136, 322 115, 382 1,780 198, 901 109, 087 320,386 1,630 162 60O 7,074 100 1,444 143 350, 999 188,890 70, 070 87,212 30 280, 047 176, 067 177, 944 50 63 2,712 1,138 1,703 13, 409 55 7,053 4,311 17,515 2,078 215, 646 138, 785 130, 674 109,380 10, 748 295, 823 161, 538 267, 880 930 12, 951 251 66 33 20 ^0' 12, 877 5,510 30 24,769 8, -910 9 97g 25,602 1,150 5,982 850 10 525 34 35 37 6 5,951 1,300 5,252 3,170 6,005 722, 867 72, 770 29,551 19, 103 2, 036, 309 23,810 19, 971 1,370 241, 337 30 27 406 16 1,500 867 10 4,485 499, 034 20, 327 7,044 7,106 874, 701 16,258 2,997 30 2,055 600 625 110, 909 16, 419 2,494 2,281 470, 715 1,077 1,990 500 47, 476 27 11 10, 292 870 1,983 1,582 4,734 233, 524 12, 473 5,555 5,832 515,249 15, 978 18, 930 225 50, 628 55 235 1,332 2 1,247 152, 481 35, 869 5,253 6,966 544, 628 1,983 20 155 61, 583 39 91 35 40 75 787 9,298 2,360 1,399 8,196 90, 816 514 12,234 1,186 779 154 2,095 67, 267 5,875 433 347 423,258 5,319 194 160 188 43 125 45 562 46 26,389 602 27, 822 16, 991 355 4 133 47 48 140 10 49 27 50 6 389 15, 264 93,303 70 8,302 769 51 BiO 2,667 2,387 1 217 124, 572 213, 841 54, 365 400 364, 839 902, 544 132, 341 391, 856 2, 017, 346 1, 107, 957 32, 599 31.104 24,448 13,246 13,456 310 56, 312 81, 475 9,197 2 99, 057 913, 311 39, 502 338, 118 819, 335 549, 435 42, 131 81, 714 45, 559 95 46, 617 69, 307 21, 681 55, 184 313, 232 258, 935 3,660 22, 618 4,770 775 15, 130 8,179 4 1,894 962 1,521 947 10, 019 15, 125 42, 126 105, 263 29, 757 320 55, 034 273, 074 29, 195 95, 272 326, 354 506, 969 ^A 'S'S 'ifi 105, 601 599, 725 26, 883 188,442 686, 803 70, 021 5,752 8,129 3,533 3,179 22, 194 23,606 50, 504 98, 472 1,956 21, 829 583, 724 104, 257 4 432 •17 21 615 2,892 100 50 20, 040 2,042 58 2,449 6,675 20 640 59 231 578 167 60 61 17, 007 62 372,386 23, 714, 771 8,336,368 514, 129 12, 444, 676 .4,036,980 716 121, 099 3, 960, 888 165, 128 5,261,245 38, 492 78 STATE OF MICHIGAN AGEIODLTUKE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. i o 1 n 13Q 1 3 1 1 o o 1 o a s S S 3 ■= 3 o § o s 1 i 1 o ■s" 1 1 ED s 1 o o 3 P 00 u ■g i 1 1 Alcona o 2,656 9,704 $12, 288 4 $4, 844 328, 882 31, 172 16,244 65 159 14 3 Alpena 4 Antrim 5 Barry 3,581 25 1,680 5,366 20,287 4,108 150 200 4,901 155 8,788 7,625 834 3,733 17, 410 8,041 6,643 10, 488 864 5,530 200 4,615 950 18, 495 537 322, 114 9,615 324,100 389, 511 861,255 325,480 1,950 3,110 413,854 640 439, 045 187 468, 218 24,006 1,640 30,587 50, 141 67,249 24,623 17, 734 2,357 13, 000 22,359 42,833 15,668 113 670 19, 315 293 17,244 48 20, 782 290 263 233 fi Bay 1 75, 737 33, 491 61, 376 67,214 1,236 195 1,195 201 952 2,031 6,133 1,671 136 152 265 212 3 92 12 471 5,224 R q 10 Cass 11 Cheboygan 1" Chippewa 100 7 1? 6,140 7,043 829 78,301 3,101 217 6 179 45 14 Delta 15 Eaton 7,345 30 9,076 14,583 125 13, 257 105 327 150 11,040 73,514 285 264 Ifi Emmet 17 25,341 130 53, 356 625 238 49 IS Gladwin 1« Grand Traverse Gratiot 28 391 6,477 169 913 40, 789 40 9,290 53, 465 891,322 69 1,310 32, 051 625 850 18, 640 18,639 3 34 150 on 1,495 109, 641 "1 Hillsdale 63,523 855 831 2,365 833 oo Houghton 93 Huron 07 4,350 4,800 100 5,395 200 1,550 394, 991 447,359 9,410 6,483 18, 820 12, 016 29 19 33, 950 49, 821 415 948 122 300 1,854 9 "ft Iosco 97 Isabella 28 17, 153 16, 364 3,031 10, 520 3 18,323 9,869 12, 249 139 30, 195 3,772 7,333 12, 392 212 46,783 17, 001 36, 750 1,329 1,254 7,320 14, 105 249 2,043 656, 726 583, 119 646, 003 438, 314 2,465 973, 588 432, 190 649, 884 750 200 56, 521 67,328 47, 984 42, 636 184 51, 015 27, 110 32,809 14, 987 155 47, 396 31,139 18, 716 28 1 3,280 2,820 212 655 17 185 290 297 185 3 440 231 305 85,274 47, 381 24,256 10,502 400 661 345 184 68 6,588 8,599 80 30 Kent T Leelenau 81,881 19, 072 25, 721 927 58 250 4,283 526 8,916 118, 590 30, 143 62, 529 2,600 3,566 413 14, 858 3,900 6,329 34 35 Macomb ?(i Manitou 17 38 Marquette 1,069 616 805 3,050 650 8,830 514, 127 55, 315 28,095 13,535 1,360,206 11, 451 900 351 16 165 206 292 32, 190 1,932 984 503 58,855 189 1,070 36 10, 197 1 3 IP Mason 5 47 60 621 22,531 213 75 18 48, 056 27 5 81 44 2 359 37,534 787 250 108 67, 430 495 125 40 Mecosta 41 Michillmackinac Midland . . . 30 A" 2,350 1,417 4 32 43 Monroe 34, 134 878 10 691 11 3 74, 696 4,917 1,735 1,020 37 302 36 27 37 66 44 Montcalm 4.'i Muskegon 4fi Newaygo 47 Oakland 97, 560 1,717 3,362 3,623 25 350 141,505 300 5,228 1,637 11 43 4R Oceana 4P Ontonagon 50 Osceola 51 Ottawa 2,993 7,117 4,707 67 12, 350 227, 183 11, 778 95 131 44 ■■fl Presque Isle "iS Saginaw 1,893 1,252 50 144 14, 690 1,093 1,000 290 435 40 1,885 915 114,665 156, 039 19, 690 150 261, 537 520,860 109, 754 296, 060 985, 194 743, 750 1,900 17, 115 430 fi,296 10,206 1,904 28 13,469 23,555 2,650 11, 681 69,478 37, 720 3 4 5L "14 Saint Clair 1,325 35 Rn Sanilac m Schoolcraft 57 4,335 4,406 467 1,501 20, 188 12, 245 3,280 9,889 1,053 6,600 46, 498 43, 935 9,607 36,251 6 24, 201 139, 480 87, 961 50 - 427 20, 376 33, 358 4,600 23,304 119, 441 131, 015 95 3,746 5 560 9,975 1,226 113 148 107 167 474 442 53 344 2 7,562 2,500 430 58 m Tuscola 60 138 1,076 837 10, 105 6,754 18, 174 61 62 Total 307,868 529, 916 1,122,074 14,427 145, 883 15,503,482 1, 641, 897 768, 256 54,408 8,045 60,603 STATE OF MICHIGAN. 79 AGRICULTUEE. PRODUCED. •i r 1^ O 1 o 1 1 § 1 to o SO 1 8 (3 4-! O •a ■§ Eh m is 9 Cm fl O 5 o -s a 1 o t " p. •s s 1 741 $44,062 8,762 315 40,411 9,917 20 136 752 34, 734 o IW 9,295 65, 310 2, 592 21,313 187 2,635 0,005 72, 070 5,700 22, 838 168 269 6,835 543, 223 ^ 2 38' » 47 r, f\ 1 23^ 46, 52S 6, 230 1, 0li7 29,332 > 9,071 1,835 1,091 55 588 25, 614 7 R 10 800 110,912 142 28,137 38 9, 463 268 16, 669 11 903 630 97, 211 5,376 78, 072 7,392 211 10 11 1.251 27, 153 340 5,787 5,260 20, 097 70 13, 115 266 647 509 3 28,005 140 v 4 n 14 5,149 202, 177 101, 452 5,060 29, 164 429, 091 69, 607 172, 918 233. 715 141,801 5,460 173, 652 74, 757 150 5,285 391,350 16, 001 152,348 135, 715 108, 518 407 5,348 496 25 143, 842 66, 678 1, 065 18, 425 433, 895 61,965 124, 686 222, 684 143, 825 3,460 270, 211 51, 311 1,220 6,804 295, 000 7,123 104, 509 136,696 63, 553 749 20 1,302 1,000 533 -74 232 919 436 228 1, 765 381 87 138, 436 36, 373 3,100 20, 529 115, 560 43, 788 65, 973 179, 539 48, 917 4, 293 48 Ti 2,676 59 16 17 569 245 20 4,414 590 831 596 2,549 18 9,605 3,014 1,308 3,215 18,214 528 17 19 970 '^11 3,872 7,928 ^1 3,996 2,876 9 130 o« 4,050 "3 158 04 "■i 17 725 1, 179 2,550 57 154 4 485 • 1, 490 800 555 1, 135 l,5i0 "fi 39 24 20 07 ]1 730 "8 oq 10, 164 130, 712 5,210 1,410 25,217 23, 604 1,380 3,500 12, 680 50 505 325 96, 4.33 34,701 250 245 6,500 8,324 84 1,250 3,014 31,476 7,118 65 30 290 1,081 10 102, 511 6,715 1,775 13, 550 11,723 655 1,655 1,345 47, 182 110 53, 197 51, 096 8,175 50 4,894 6, 7:J9 104 7'JO 13,008 21, 792 1,616 731 163 11 437 253 12 93 73 107 12 853 124, 198 7, 06'3 1.130 15, 073 15, 212 730 2,176 5,464 2, 176 283 55, 580 30 69 31 32 31 486 33 515 164 34 ~ 24 31 98 3r 713 5 193 6 37 849 3fl 8 3q 1,408 22,434 1,692 49, 726 100 3,962 279 139 40 41 6,123 20 257, 306 3,630 232, 469 700 4,374 240 206,991 3,320 222, 393 1,630 1,139 1,484 1,303 160 98, 061 2,430 28 41 41 44 4f 25 1,155 143 75 650 370 42 4,150 4f 41 5,450 61,915 10, 698 179, 817 2,560 124, 232 26, 913 82, 501 1 ,'6,243 73, 511 10, 920 950 12, 266 200 130, 433 253 48, 797 9,640 15, 014 55, 801 28, 131 585 200 1,020 240 4,348 42 6,4.32 934 4,287 12, 859 886 20 2,350 89,271 1,320 168, 092 10 88, 789 18, 199 49, 180 41, 880 54, 043 1,385 1, 400 43,054 660 125, 545 343 200 100 34 129 1,330 53, 188 2,836 86, 224 2,517 78, 3C0 14, 290 81, 41)0 63, 039 31,495 2,670 4f 1,331 93 f 113 •Sf 5,232 1,331 4,506 620 386 114 76 329 200 549 424 93 51 3 ,5' 4,060 57, 352 12, 957 16, 650 49, 369 30, 084 1,260 1,000 5 1,153 199 227 333 15 ,5r 220 M 3,082 5. 3,266 200 W 744 30 1,233 119 r<' •; 3,336 1,107 221, 830 40, 548 122, .■388 156, 902 90, 967 114, 227 16, 648 76, 264 166, 950 37, 663 2,591 196 14, 096 2,716 4,228 144, .523 42, 579 99, 334 161,115 58,546 110, 550 10,932 143. 466 145, 830 30, 339 893 670 1,288 456 1,160 250 1,023 83, 051 23, 841 88, 513 86, 328 77, 051 297 1,381 1,897 361 (1 3,492 4,375 00 6 4,000 2, U73 fi 3 932 6 101, 371 3, 642, 841 2, 186, 993 121,411 2, 941, 952 2,176,002 3,280 38,038 20, 388 18, 988 2, 503, 485 792 1 11 82 STATE OF MINNESOTA AGRICULTURE. COUKTIES. PRODUCED. ■s CO 1 S 1 n 1 h ■s □a g 1 a o II I-- % "S o 1 1 n o 1 1 ■s CO 1 u 1 O 1 o Q* O 1 o 223 1,363 $266 38, 610 5,220 3,255 58 T 4 Benton 83 6 $i00 18 4,250 6,079 82, 367 530 3,920 906 8,636 "S 476 6 n 7 648 146 30 291 3,862 62, 505 5,950 1 8 8 q 138 5,317 100 91, 410 17 9,155 10 1,262 4,429 13 11 1" 636 1,333 70 15, 891 500 1,336 50 2,372 40 3 n 14 15 5,248 7,749 45 12 16, 104 381 7,165 1,729 3,351 20 1,890 450 50 51 3,569 406 1,342 2,064 517 201 18 3,197 148, 777 72, 755 2,700 34, 735 387, 853 78,055 159, 256 204,580 137, 046 4,600 12, 105 11, 392 13, 242 7,854 450 3,857 28,684 9,403 13, Oil 15, 811 9,692 596 8 37 647 26 16 17 IB Faribault 195 2,850 18, 848 6,418 4,041 11,315 5,292 490 45 759 46 33 lU 72 4 11 142 26 "0 91 3,590 33,070 800 216 no Hennepin 250 6 3 °3 24 "4 95 "6 Jackson 715 1,100 1,050 39 125 110 97 95 • 98 100 9q Lake 30 Le Sueur 1,043 179 100 96,773 1,810 1,425 22,290 14,780 620 2,115 5,697 47,440 1,080 96, 693 3,190 524 10, 068 850 170 2,698 2,083 62 345 729 4,611 94 9,856 67 31 10 Martin 33 McLeod 423 250 107 125 45 32 223 107 1,520 261 6 34 140 50 56 35 Male Lac 36 Monongalia 37 Morrison 120 150, 6,636 50 4,574 38 837 39 m Murray 40 Nieollet 3,507 556 9,175 11 41 Noble 49, Olmstead 9,932 757 125 • 50 148, 468 2,150 23,629 21,461 556 2 239 43 Otter Tail 44 Pembina 45 Pierce 4fi Pine 190 110 47 Pipestone 48 Polk 200 1,473 1,450 17, 623 400 148, 096 715 124,622 16, 145 74, 150 87,565 65, 075 6,100 400 2,000 325 2,996 670 16,462 140 7,861 1,873 604 12,224 6,940 625 49 Ramsey 944 60 23,425 50 Renville 51 Rice 12,208 137 2,544 576 861 1,650 1,041 1,720 30 513 285 285 876 861 18S 10 100 20, 110 200 4,500 2,210 1,000 " "■ 319 3 52 St. Louis Scott 53 258 54 Sherburne 55 Sibley 20 4 20 100 59 56 Stearns 57 Steele 8,206 58 Todd 60 50 59 Toombs 60 Wabashaw 4,183 136 19,640 9,329 361 2,240 354 1,303 945 443 305 150 335 200 10,762 135, 245 41,325 77, 817 117, 845 71, 285 516 8,345 2,830 9,326 4,951 13,559 3,836 4,451 10, 443 5,626 6 32 64 47 a35 32 6J Waseca 15 30 62 Washington 10 169 1 63 Winona 7 20 61 Wright -- - 33 2 Total 109, 668 28,052 649 412 174, 704 2,957,673 199,314 179, 482 432 3,182 132 STATE OF MINNESOTA. 83 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. ■s 1 f 'aa m ■3 HEMr. o 1 t 1 1 o 1 ' 1 CO O U s 1 o a* si ® r-T s S 11 1 EC •s o 1 1 1 1 i . 1 h 1 a h s ° 1 It ■s o 1 a 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 1 645 101 453 5 100 $6,262 1 2 607 3,565 175 128 56 400 2,544 13, 899 '' 10 93 4 1,296 257 104 $235 7,047 150 29,629 6 3,976 330 29,122 90 112 5 246 195 3, 1.54 6,449 768 50 450 75 7,903 56 13 14 15 3 6 285 242 140 52 99 75 1,630 60 97 38, 395 17, 206 630 8,282 56, 649 8,582 25,310 153, 620 34,305 556 4 126 3,527 950 191 3,855 585 1,585 120,324 426 210 62 50 415 1,395 1,853 231 46 335 7 23 16 , 125 25 400 30 6 2 506 3,535 325 750 4,760 2,470 32 5,377 54 23 3,670 15 1,566 50 80 82 52 4 33 25 26 16 73 550 60 07 28 29 54, 337 4,451 30 38 980 100 42, 499 1,250 296 3,373 2,805 130 305 2,194 7,522 113 11, 146 31 2 39 1,445 1,050 5,210 140 177 70 237 22 720 3 34 187 3 1,000 930 37 21 128 200 106 1R 15 253 29 2,173 202 865 76 2,205 197 40 41 313 7 1,590 700 202 1,310 36, 603 .10 118 4? 440 30 122 47 175 2,550 700 8,342 60 35, 066 425 25,857 4,656 15, 060 19,282 10, 457 525 48 2 250 4*> 242 15 64,975 1,150 13,256 560 4,010 275 3,505 1,100 1,706 70 921 549 30 1,378 51 2 55 2,250 51 170 298 54 233 75 1,180 10 55 "ifi 4 21 1,450 51 "17 50 58 51 50 6,470 1,555 522 27,627 423 841 83 1,073 2,508 67 60 2,440 2,275 565 1,091 335 152 25,666 8,595 25,430 30, 401 21.328 60 300 10 4 1 4 1 264 65 9 2,866 61 62 30 75 63 1 81 64 ■ 109 1,983 118 52 370, 669 23, 038 14, 178 1,544 34,285 7,981 751, 544 84 STATE OF MISSISSIPPI. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. ACRES OF LAND. S3, LIVE STOCK. 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 53 63 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 Adams Amite Attala Bolivar Calhoun CaiToU Chickasaw . . Choctaw Claiborne . . . Clark Coahoma Copiah Covington... De Soto Franklin Green Hancock* . . . Harrison Hinds Holmes Issaquena - . . Itawamba . . . Jackson Jasper Jefferson Jones Kemper Lafayette - . . Lauderdale. - Lawrence . . . Leake Lowndes Madison Mai'ion Marshall Monroe Neshoba Newton Noxubee Oktibbeha.. - Panola Perry Pike Pontotoc Hankin Scott Simpson Smith Sunflower* . - Tallahatchie . Tippah Tishomingo.. Tunica Warren Washington* . Wayne Wilkinson — Winston Yalabusha — Yazoo Total. 103, 394 99, 004 91, 513 85, 188 56, 295 164, 239 102, 417 90, 204 127, 260 47, 018 39, 139 106, 203 25, 340 174, 952 64, 384 6,671 125, 619 277, 389 229, 711 216, 504 155, 571 408, 216 192, 764 257, 055 153, 265 110, 323 121, 670 307, 809 101,973 243, 979 204, 804 71, 399 $3, 000, 800 2, 169, 575 2, 435, 023 8, 759, 270 1, 260, 177 8, 276, 506 4, 509, 034 2, 432, 510 4, 778, 610 2, 293, 619 5, 100, 595 1, 550, 639 428, 195 6, 578, 547 1, 341, 737 879, 110 $81, 595 137, 685 98, 871 284, 036 113, 891 355, 714 150, 674 137, 865 194, 750 75, 625 129, 750 155, 470 59, 113 282, 518 150, 129 11,728 2,201 2,251 2,331 764 2,001 3,078 2,739 3,099 2,558 1,194 714 3,128 1,030 3,327 1,806 455 2,916 1,361 1,882 3,180 666 4,079 2,812 1,616 3,349 1,031 1,385 2,052 237 4,135 918 90 3,063 4,012 4,412 2,777 3,221 6,095 4,111 5,369 4,191 2,610 1,999 4,686 2,188 6,575 2,972 2,183 8,674 190, 599 136, 992 66, 596 95, 866 2,605 67, 708 123, 368 14, 533 88, 897 101, 469 81, 570 53, 352 56,289 167, 373 239, 788 24, 216 214, 939 153, 699 45, 787 48, 805 162, 835 90, 959 102, 986 9,629 58, 292 145, 546 90, 086 38, 463 38, 741 37, 283 54, 907 141,981 106, 834 29, 341 110, 480 18, 799 112, 693 66, 630 113, 646 179, 288 210, 342 208, 384 108, 472 309, 673 51, 403 184, 375 159, 159 92, 768 174, 168 271, 977 128, 872 205, 428 123, 293 154, 190 187, 496 103, 681 248, 939 261.717 147, 7i;0 143, 693 178,710 139, 324 216, 625 92, 602 240, 610 321, 967 278, 738 157, 043 114, 316 118, 947 166, 025 334, 7.34 324, 680 91, 085 186, 089 5, 005, 755 40, 420 170, 822 203, 488 235, 683 411, 121 10, 773, 929 683, 900 6, 240, 445 6, 074, 192 6, 576, 505 2,021,943 38, 006 2, 157, 167 3, 232, 595 351, 438 2, 533, 819 3. 180, 690 2, 032, 489 1, 286, 135 1, 413, 378 7, 726, 605 8. 181, 595 386, 083 7, 076, 960 6, 446, 406 960, 192 1, 179, 733 8, 353, 247 3, 352, 455 3, 682, 361 209, 598 1, 544, 998 4, 264, 377 3, 346, 169 1, 528, 199 879, 970 1, 101, 771 3, 337, 592 3, 349, 432 2, 110, 705 4, 217, 575 5, 141, 820 347, 840 3, 389, 407 1, 505, 740 3, 235, 661 10, 287, 237 190, 760, 307 25, 900 311, 161 267, 102 273, 620 142, 158 5,347 88,824 220, 056 18, 895 108, 841 156, 510 139, 059 80, 761 72, 342 188, 010 434, 675 27, 807 415, 410 179, 597 69, 164 64, 273 244, 804 137, 152 198, 410 11, 955 127, 610 233, 148 144, 230 68, 134 50, 288 76,638 158, 926 228, 606 179, 777 106, 793 96, 217 32, 301 254, 113 114, 925 131, 408 522, 151 217 3,080 1,889 554 4,006 224 1,991 2,407 861 2,294 2,496 2,078 2,374 1,476 2,047 2,789 945 3,455 3,046 1,625 1,731 2,469 1,735 2,151 646 2,818 4,905 2,528 1,446 1,481 1,486 1,043 4,270 4,456 386 444 2,315 1,554 2,359 2,729 8, 826, 512 279 4,608 3,721 2,082 1,484 20 1,206 3,765 70 1,502 2,210 1,265 546 840 3,942 5,236 166 4,604 3,976 535 994 2,372 2,178 2,304 105 403 2,765 1,597 802 483 540 1,553 2,524 1,513 1,106 3,394 403 3,131 1,148 2,313 5,319 110, 723 901 5,484 4,101 1,516 5,684 1,159 3,316 4,095 1,708 3,842 4,598 3,965 3,308 2,564 3,866 4,887 5,718 4,716 2,922 2,678 4,128 3,182 4,051 2,490 3,660 7,446 4,383 2,636 2,183 2,631 2,677 6,624 5,553 1,632 4,154 1,085 3,996 3,057 4,455 6,131 207, 646 2,438 2,325 2,029 1,601 1,569 3,590 2,147 2,540 2,836 2,572 1,015 2,348 2,027 419 319 2,644 2,054 1,229 2,765 250 1,581 3,109 614 1,547 2,029 1, 789 1,899 1,436 1,416 2,686 894 2,427 1,839 1,376 1,335 1,562 1,414 1,734 672 1,818 3,260 2,252 1,138 1,334 1,244 1,252 3,077 3,292 588 3,330 500 2,684 1,393 2,426 3,654 6,888 8,169 8,549 7,181 5,794 12, 158 7,751 7,414 10, 678 4,371 5,284 9,275 2,985 12, 339 5,245 5.513 3,412 11, 253 9,290 3,604 9,582 3,755 6,191 8,693 3,108 8,828 9,278 7,866 7,252 5,621 6,231 10, 134 11, 334 8,945 5,021 6,562 7,893 6,461 9,605 5,759 7,659 12,077 11,002 5,977 3,190 4, 214 6,221 8,832 10, 380 4,560 12, 986 2,673 9,097 5,426 7,489 9,606 9,320 7,635 7,266 1,087 4,947 7,297 6,799 11, 536 9,613 3,044 471 8,322 4,569 8,679 2,643 3,233 4,559 11, 925 4,293 1, 436 12, 195 4,249 6,821 7,844 3,141 4,911 8,895 5,447 7,527 3,959 4,8 11,917 10,183 9,356 4,272 5,767 4,299 5,025 6,621 3,783 7,218 13, 366 5,502 3,616 4,517 3,882 1,610 12,634 13, 499 223 9.599 318 6,945 5,973 6,111 7,846 352, 632 * No returns. STATE OF MISSISSIPPI 85 AGRICULTURE. ^ LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED I 3 13, 266 28,553 33, 546 16, 679 S6, 056 58, 412 42, 610 41,277 23, 086 17, 065 12,538 30, 740 11, 314 45, 946 13,779 9,304 $787, 100 645, 834 791, 421 753,247 426, 258 1, 493, 654 998, 901 908, 527 996, 975 433, 603 426, 656 864, 540 282, 841 1, 365, 928 449, 449 154, 140 21, 949 173 1,230 585 3,087 10, 422 S.'i, 734 30, 968 300 3,121 1,025 161 1,472 700 39,973 144 60 50 98 3,825 7 402, 510 410, 299 567, 159 401, 966 337, 714 1, 140, 174 862, 256 599, 995 522, 935 297, 860 235, 380 560, 880 155, 420 834, 165 307, 711 48, 048 1,435 2,612 300 3,754 5,950 4,946 2,603 93, 990 102 97 439 2,498 85 2,410 100 1,050 1,360 2,959 20 30 13, 82] 30, 000 80, 050 1, 470 30, 205 7 1,002 53, 685 686 455 29, 788 17, 456 14, 587 33, 452 8,' 166 42, 8?0 26, 494 13, 558 33,-a.78 9,196 13, 325 22, 461 3,002 40, :^13 13,560 146 1.5, 123 15, 220 11, 232 9,325 12, 414 11, 527 18, 427 24,210 3,889 42 6,307 12, 016 16, 351 5,472 8,fi05 48, 680 79, 815 39, 843 50 3,472 158, 282 18, 863 9,226 97, 095 17, 564 806 31, 176 28, 626 67, 492 10, 747 2,042 18, 750 10, 186 4,218 3,925 1,846 11, 660 7,737 1,707 9,427 3,700 6,783 1,569 2,380 22,508 3,874 387 79, 450 157, 839 64, 025 17, 768 55, 985 159, 158 95, 319 110, 265 82, 935 78, 094 11, 430 99, 337 51, 907 89, 620 61,016 25, 443 4,836 46, 210 39, 020 6,615 37, 269 .3,252 24, 241 20, 312 13,361 27, 262 36, 007 26, 520 23,862 18, 852 44, 144 47, 215 53,127 46, 183 16, 486 19, 179 50, 932 31, 585 29, E06 10, 424 24, 972 56, 845 29, 694 17, 169 14, 786 15, 692 130, 461 1, 433, 495 1, 141, 658 438, 408 860, 164 78, 547 610, 147 "944, 251 190, 303 665, 306 708, 630 657, 607 478,497 440, 035 1, 102, 729 1, 373, 590 1, 508, 821 1, 255, 623 485, 021 438, 160 1, 486, 462 820, 555 889, 004 199, 732 619, 276 1,360-706. 861, 250 . 362,799 409, 467 351, 943 470 1,677 29, 481 1,411 90 20 4,902 35, 049 3,253 511 8,644 24, 816 3,810 58, 409 29, 782 15, 918 1,332 8,210 22, 359 23, 350 459 990 44, 573 1,028 3,120 916 1,503 75 525 240 1,597 355 220 85 348 4,262 449 158 485 1,080 3,830 4,423 1,220 561 563 558 554 2,052 37 543 1,426 39 100 14 465 48, 274 1, 028, 343 845, 724 398, 500 627, 659 14, 715 396, 360 525, 375 81, 545 497, 349 644, 089 478, 271 281, 213 309, 194 1, 157, 271 1, 194, 540 122, 230 1, 068, 350 1, 145, 499 269, 085 346, 460 1, 286, 085 664, 595 533, 340 73, 920 314, 135 1, 013, 328 497, 975 296, 085 201, 639 243, 143 600 6,508 621 1,430 4,916 1,445 100 253 2,925 975 2,001 290 3,870 2,608 5,424 128, 480 2,920 5 20 1,938 10, 500 39,229 3,000 100 3,568 20, 653 4,350 70 30, 015 206 7,520 380 300 137 570 170 990 225 1,305 5,404 7,871 1,084 3,433 7,663 1,727 2,797 1,178 6,097 3,154 726 1,088 100 240 3,150 900 1,200 3,710 965 3,053 1,371 1,925 220 100, 356 57, 467 1,296 43, 210 1,598 5,108 31, 611 900 960 655 867 119 2,439 40 375 4,670 54, 685 4i; 840 41, 170 12, 276 4 10, 132 30, 913 633 15, 404 19,282 12, 700 6,893 10, 251 51,234 51,327 2,379 49,348 46, 385 5,692 8,205 50, 0§6 19, 959 24, 311 306 8,588 24, 258 18, 156 7,152 4,670 5,509 11, 251 36, 870 5,368 3,826 23, 024 10, 106 11, 739 23,062 7,017 8,653 11, 260 11, 290 11, 585 9,080 8,627 29, 718 6,952 18,820 14, 800 10, 116 2,816 9,877 9,490 14, 058 8,489 15,596 22, 950 9,890 6,937 8,770 8,957 3,846 105, 629 12, 119 1,800 47, 618 1,079 19, 337 91, 666 8,510 20, 206 67, 008 58, 109 7,238 23, 530 65, 318 18, 279 19. 168 148, 355 50, 745 4,743 18, 997 27, 762 28, 563 53, 810 6,517 65, 695 12, 820 25,485 24, 837 21. 169 22, 575 391 16,328 11, 125 1,980 6,594 313 4,565 10, 190 1, ]69 8,626 12, 518 8,816 1,670 4,980 6,896 14, 905 975 28, 439 6,169 3,338 1,982 9,776 7,607 12, 854 1,065 5,599 13, 553 9,062 4,917 2,944 3,212 18, 3!)5 178, 387 104, 217 6,500 100, 955 9,870 93, 890 85, 675 31, 739 111, 795 74, 084 125, 214 52, 272 57, 535 117, 491 215, 070 34, 995 118, 359 196, 542 63, 350 55,038 147, 414 84, 643 57, 520 39, 8.53 68,241 117, 422 101, 427 64, 878 37, 147 56, 816 17, 039 43, 485 43, 621 10, 324 34, 005 546, 938 1, 212, 010 1, 017, 938 308, 625 794, 788 2,746 58,049 38, 884 575 100 100 2,094 1,708 120 373, 150 814, 625 883, 081 180, 055 57,865 1,262 2, 4153 3,205 675 200 1 7,588 531 500 2,350 2,643 15, 045 200 15, 894 20, 327 11, 479 13,025 36, 338 3,568 24, 362 22,768 525 29, 786 27,646 48,380 35,533 3,363 30,587 9,864 14, 315 12, 926 3,727 21, 213 49, 434 81, 500 82, 708 9,613 53, 544 6,478 20, 744 20, 476 31, 434 39, 733 164, 464 888, 793 469, 290 821, 319 1, 526, 200 320 16, 688 7,072 130 243 150 53 95, 545 494, 117 361, 005 553, 656 956, 330 40 5,713 465 1,227 810 3,125 1,635 2,742 39, 387 9,690 24, 760 64,075 300 9,321 10, 247 1,740 3, 288 3,800 38, 410 5,210 57, 384 20, 251 557 5,448 2,600 1,040 9,415 25, 365 94, 208 66, 100 76, 536 159, 500 , 532, 768 41, 891, 692 587,925 39, 474 29, 057, 682 321,235 809, 082 159, 141 1, 203, 507 665, 959 414, 320 ,563,873 8G STATE OF MISSISSIPPI. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. 1 1 1 1 1 O ■s 1 1 II |i a p. •s a i s en ■s •S s u ■3 1 09 i Re 1 3 $22, 210 13,400 100 $49,211 350 100 64, 705 70, 874 98,590 1,238 265 2,107 121 100 3 Attala 2 il 8 797 2, 555 4,349 623 23,250 1,000 1,000 150 2,861 13, 049 87, 715 160, 638 152, 376 143, 184 84, 450 48,535 815 38, 660 24, 397 226, 764 25, 007 4,265 65 100 4 2,783 12 10 5 (^ Carroll 100 20 1,093 56 2,752 360 18,015 2,067 10 Clark 4 2 8 75 238 50 TO 50 30 200 5 387 3,349 n 50 6 320 139 8 ifi 815 20 4 17 IR Harrison 4,800 5,459 205 13 352 80 865 4,157 5 2,295 131, 077 107, 564 2,000 154, 635 740 57, 328 91, 684 11, 850 115,316 162, 595 72, 972 26,627 70, 872 25 1,575 2,356 5 21 If Hinds 10 5 60 "n Holmes "1 no 168 103 2,156 8,389 133 7,280 2,127 1,310 300 11,257 75 1,938 520 52 15 W "4 Jasper 45 20 97 1,641 2,306 "■) Jefferson 12,345 "Oi 50 20 8 1 97 169 303 1,077 15 2 ?R Lafayette 400 25 17 57 "0 Lauderdale 1 1 26 10 Lawrence 11 20 89 30 4,590 10 9 39 ?1 Madison 2,029 425 1,120 168, 048 16,410 244, 861 107, 511 70, 727 38, 490 164, 676 129,435 132,465 13, 830 78,835 279, 677 220 100 91 14 14 Marion iri Marsliall 55 139 91 15 710 5 9,995 2,464 151 364 391 53 2,515 3,211 2,595 81 1 5 124 46 35 6 ifi 180 1,020 37 Neshoba 3R 39 155 7 10 90 18, 875 5,630 4,903 10,236 6,392 10, 140 121 581 53 71 265 80 5,774 30 37 175 115 36 2 33 1 843 9 50 40 Oktibbeha 320 6 2 41 Panola 77 43 43 Pike 8 235 5,576 271 10 47 44 Pontotoc 289 98 160 4.5 Rankin 4fi Scott 98 5 1,665 64, 419 21, 837 31,248 100 50 307 47 Simpson 4R Smith 7 8 49 Sunflower 50 TaUahatchie 5 115 273 10 100 46 6,416 3,300 268 224 239 61 282 1,253 70, 562 287, 215 276, 093 45, 440 111, 525 220 448 213 6 4,305 104 25 10 112 258 15 37 R1 Tippah 1 ."ia Tishomingo 93 37 .w Tunica .'i4 Warren 175 31, 966 550 8,095 •W ■Washington .w Wayne 3,676 614 650 / 9, 841 58, 393 95, 575 74, 420 135, 947 .'-17 Wilkinson 723 990 .W Winston 69 40 15 50 .sn Yalabusha fiO Yazoo 2,800 3,120 2, 824 60 Total 1,875 1,699 254,718 7,262 124, 281 5, 006, 610 4,427 32, 901 8 1,084 248 STATE OF MISSISSIPPI. 87 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. o > t i ■3 m ■3 a 1 HEMP. o CD 6( ■s 1 1 i i a, 1 o a* o '3 bo u ED s f " CO O 1 t ft g § 6 it 1 p a S So 1 o 188 1,292 1,272 160 20, 938 25,006 $6, 980 9,586 18,405 $74, 180 104, 859 170, 819 35, 836 125, 209 289,218 277, 844 192, 556 110, 385 74, 318 17, 648 136, 304 86, 975 250, 507 58,477 24, 905 281 416 358 1,130 380 1,074 10 130 284 578 887 840 736 19, 554 17, 579 16, 439 23, 333 2,445 300 850 8,934 8,960 25, 318 8,551 10, 366 23, 046 3,949 45,996 1.36, 848 128, 245 2,393 30 11 1,668 75, 190 7,521 2,358 4,351 130 17 245 1,528 446 2,426 19, 385 12, 699 1,694 1,016 9,477 11, 183 226, 842 205, 809 600 197, 263 10, 146 129, 214 149, 704 34,837 146, 413 229, 461 134, 880 94, 616 104, 103 275, 1C8 2.32, 335 44, 970 350, 295 284, 321 80, 234 74, 198 327, 037 181, 220 186, 991 36, 299 116, 462 277, 800 1.30, 426 83, 472 75, 470 71, 383 320 80 39 403 1,115 1,628 652 2,017 583 844 2,946 150 1,813 156 1,218 348 1,511 475 1,162 1,038 743 28, 458 8,305 23,171 3,750 12,162 24, 630 12, 557 17, 772 3,506 23,182 16,425 19, 857 7,195 17, 398 14,805 13, 550 390 25,560 13, 845 15,432 16, 124 8,685 29, 408 15, 427 11, 040 2,950 10, 820 86, 699 6,355 20, 830 40, 782 19, 782 17, 684 27, 490 19, 063 10,367 14, 278 9,596 18,628 10, 773 49, 656 22, 944 19, 985 11, 299 9.513 28,896 6,813 7,186 17, 644 57, 320 11,457 14, 733 13, 275 31, 263 200 40 15 ^P fi() 260 313 120 1, 230 1,400 340 31 T? '*1 ?"i 10 2 121 350 1,240 571 675 1,553 650 1,276 858 833 60 33 A^ 41 1,602 d\/\ •IS 4i\ ,, 47 1,051 '18 44 44 15 805 2,065 523 1,184 932 473 250 10, 246 30,503 23, 021 3,366 275 2,308 144, 269 83, 990 99, 379 259, 501 230, 527 45, 098 114, 155 "iO ^1 50 3 =;:! =i"l 51, 798 ^t 'ii 1,285 428 14, 820 220 25, 431 75,938 119,105 141,075 165, 512 •ifl 802 655 5,725 16, 464 ri7 *SR 54 fiO 50 3 10 99 506 10,016 1,427 42, 603 708, 237 1, 382, 144 7, 809, 153 88 STATE OF MISSOURI. AGRIOULTUEE. COUNTIES. ACRES OF LAND. a ■a a "S S o i 'I a £ «l .g ^ a |4 LIVE STOCK. Adair Andrew Atchison Audrain Barry Burton Bates , Benton Bollinger Boone Buchanan Bntlor Caldwell Callaway Camden Cape Girardeau Carroll Carter Cass Cedar Chariton , Christian Clark , Clay Clinton Cole Cooper Crawford Dade.. , Dallas Daviess DeKalb Dent Douglas Dunklin Franklin Gasconade Gentry Greene Gmudy Harrison Henry Hickory Holt Howai-d Howell Iron Jackson Jasper Jefferson Johnson Knox Laclede Lafayette Lawrence Lewis Lincoln Linn Livingston Macon Madison Maries 45, 373 72,026 30, 964 84, 531 27, 243 6,552 33, 781 51, 371 34, 680 202, 487 113, 399 8,979 39, 420 154, 578 17, 267 78, 816 51, 788 4,603 76, 898 37, 658 81, 171 23,789 73, 195 127, 314 71, 616 39, 899 116, 197 25, 845 41, 830 40,923 72, 038 33,589 21, 271 7,458 15, 822 76, 559 35, 704 65, 737 78, 913 48, 750 57, 699 72,977 25, 632 26, 058 143,204 7,824 16,087 127, 662 41, 537 46,653 108, 889 69, 451 18, 390 150,092 42, 768 94, 954 120, 473 53, 869 41, 682 83, 157 19,555 25,894 125, 090 108, 528 75, 774 160, 90S 60, 887 96,223 114, 385 179, 486 155, 875 166, 821 135, 721 59, 628 106, 097 295, 918 46, 283 187, 205 140, 528 24, 517 183, 248 162, 682 213, 737 66, 029 112, 939 124, 3.39 98, 785 123, 783 177, 053 114, 453 151, 856 120, 950 189, 636 72, 968 165, 843 14, 274 63, 159 207, 135 . 156, 492 225, 480 177, 135 136, 325 132, 135 185, 309 96, 492 66, 418 123, 756 31, 012 55,406 140, 104 118, 215 193, 019 273, 356 129, 528 52, 174 180, 062 83, 731 98, 691 226, 647 145, 814 100, 909 185, 746 62, 363 117, 024 $755, 715 3, 000, 467 1, 318, 545 3, 557, 273 624, 994 398, 895 1, 074, 464 1, 342, 291 694, 655 4, 634, 820 6, 523, 511 189, 001 1, 282, 636 4, 818, 339 390, 845 2, 709, 272 2, 467, 993 105, 245 2, 690, 460 1, 370, 566 2, 680, 166 783, 906 3, 046, 500 5, 309, 271 2, 834, 145 1,247,878 5, 186, 619 697, 264 1, 414, 927 497, 821 2, 526, 192 1, 495, 356 450, 605 115, 015 614, 457 3, 316, 300 1, 326, 430 2, 688, 986 3, 163, 870 1, 770, 195 1, 514, 849 2, 704, 097 825, 491 1, 314, 860 4, 157, 312 204, 475 620, 510 5, 621, 815 1, 231, 883 2, 416, 360 4, 233, 771 1, 195, 880 553, 361 7, 782, 352 1, 298, 875 3, 287, 203 4, 240, 348 2, 003, 723 1, 475, 367 2, 661, 038 384, 725 686, 907 J62, 139 105, 647 58, 678 96, 021 54,177 12. 915 49, 537 89, 625 50, 504 186, 246 135, 519 15,554 66, 008 170, 814 23, 096 140, 633 111, 961 7,068 115, 028 65, 448 111, 170 51, 492 101, 607 128, 726 79, 451 48, 943 167, 030 45, 187 53,123 14, 807 92, 680 44, 864' 30, 684 11, 046 28,255 146, 640 78, 166 130, 125 130, 036 76, 373 74, 135 106, 341 40, 081 51, 733 196, 805 21, 588 25,191 137, 058 68. 916 74, 999 179, 614 66,944 12, 696 209, 513 65, 193 104, 241 153, 070 78,930 62, 306 116, 496 35, 206 46, 539 2,138 4,558 1,888 4,254 2,544 528 2,127 4,258 2,641 9,292 4,966 798 2,454 7,627 1,652 4,887 3,052 407 5,304 2,797 4,962 2,347 3,158 5,870 3,314 2,948 6,415 2,457 3,333 2,762 4,269 2,100 1,501 749 1,302 5,628 2,846 3,845 5,469 2,715 2,859 4,514 2,295 1,446 6,226 607 975 6,502 2,904 3,342 6,081 2,748 1,610 6,346 3,180 4,903 6,946 2,920 3,048 5,035 1,212 2,494 139 746 276 1,486 411 41 429 535 226 4,621 1,225 102 435 2,721 265 703 563 27 1,091 608 977 508 316 1,496 645 432 2,788 337 739 484 444 253 182 38 160 519 173 324 2,033 383 113 1,472 402 262 2,342 135 163 2,424 880 174 374 2,825 1,024 938 1,196 564 670 631 199 319 2,319 4,016 2,481 2,873 2,216 473 1,963 3,978 2,350 6,911 5,394 1,254 2,251 6,460 1,461 4,131 2,964 450 4,066 2,966 4,815 2,044 3,876 4,697 2,910 2,714 5,508 2,478 3,963 2,482 4,085 2,015 1,946 917 1,954 5,977 3,290 3,831 4,405 2,674 2,827 4,098 2,402 1,744 5,617 817 1,294 5,363 2,380 4,174 5,525 3,098 1,309 6,362 2,343 3,914 5,639 3,013 2,591 4,473 1,187 2,154 1,215 1,427 1,120 1,482 1,761 375 999 2,310 1,125 2,515 1,212 682 1,071 2,231 999 1,522 1,674 267 2,159 1,728 2,657 1,731 1,187 8,454 1,425 839 2,111 1,342 1,882 2,840 1,111 917 1,423 981 1,054 2,469 2,089 2,190 3,136 1,171 1,420 2,340 1,436 834 2,324 839 657 2,937 1,342 2,661 3,067 1,341 1,063 3,395 1,55* 1,263 2,150 1,516 1,495 2,505 805 1,416 4,332 6,619 4,748 6,800 4,244 979 4,011 6,344 3,711 14, 803 7,876 2,569 3,214 14, 095 2,766 5,634 6,354 587 7,297 3,821 9,775 3,575 7,850 12, 426 6,124 4,831 12, 638 4,044 4, 035 4,498 5,345 3,260 2,699 1,490 4,099 12, 575 5,958 6,917 8,875 4,849 3,929 8,277 4,099 3,858 9,743 1,421 1,952 10, 159 4,787 7,342 10,038 7,062 3,190 15, 112 3,870 11, 099 11, 053 5,296 5,345 9,789 2,971 4,920 6,057 10, 379 4,387 11, 477 7,6 9 5,180 8,105 6,542 27,010 10, 495 1,363 4,375 27,728 3,9 11,320 8,722 1,015 9,508 7,9 11, 111 5,217 7,379 15, 822 8,954 7,089 16, 0115 6,231 9,548 9,054 10, 189 4,6C6 4,705 1,602 2,217 10, 2!)4 8, 579 11, 962 16, 094 8,401 8,481 8,456 5,609 5,248 19, 343 1,700 2,472 J.0, 462 7,696 7,314 13, 973 9,958 5,044 12,553 7,798 14, 206 14,741 8,466 8,456 15,222 3,893 6, 321 I STATE OF MISSOURI 89 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED, 5 » ° 16, 510 33, 713 21,223 18, 966 17, 767 4,053 13,906 14, 373 17,294 63, 513 39, 346 7,995 14, 707 41,559 9,753 28, 733 27, 181 2,726 31, 298 17,259 42,675 13, 510 23, 146 40, 882 23,036 16,6^ 49, 186 13, 600 12,589 12, 965 23,889 12, 326 6,029 5,913 19, 157 38,336 19, 163 18, 119 28,071 22,123 23, 464 27, 080 10, 361 13, 521 42, 100 4,853 6,134 43, 741 14, 208 22, 074 38, 001 18, 145 7,896 52, 324 15,484 27,267 30, 365 21, 459 24, 953 34, 543 8,164 12,802 $321, 564 593, 172 312, 360 738, 228 342, 666 75, 980 396,377 526,558 264, 170 1, 621, 297 837, 241 135,324 465, 706 1, 306, 752 195, 530 606, 711 531, 059 53,894 673, 391 411, 839 698, 934 343, 555 575, 725 893, 813 409, 375 322, 363 1, 204, 223 301, 576 431, 179 351, 306 490, 053 273, 937 183, 801 111, 352 237, 017 743, 174 333, 410 647, 936 879, 374 368, 260 371. 129 717, 059 294, 218 267, 448 1, 179, 545 98, 571 138, 677 1, 046, 802 399, 801 418, 818 1, 062, 153 245, 157 197, 424 1, 080, 333 428, 766 606, 894 1, 121, 062 439. 130 380, 007 743, 385 161, 310 278, 413 12 7,864 51, 515 51,463 11,519 49, 942 2,124 1,779 21, 304 50,035 71, 906 64,335 3,582 6,810 60,692 15, 878 198, 475 12,137 2,604 31, 326 30, 234 12, 816 48, 015 30, 786 39, 398 18, 194 42, 944 70, 432 24, 498 41, 402 42, 799 15,564 10, 003 19, 980 9,182 6,098 96, 510 48,104 41, 037 130, 795 16, 415 15, 300 8,327 18, 556 17,236 87, 998 6,721 15,477 60,909 38, 644 55, 698 35, 601 7,925 30,909 50, 672 67, 406 36, 587 109, 152 8,600 10, 430 5,614 30,647 18, 362 1,648 9,636 2,250 433 7,382 116 100 5,827 593 5,769 11, 379 75 673 6,994 227 1,377 665 175 490 3,062 1,804 3,547 10, 648 2,694 2,982 685 2,462 1,865 2,605 1,392 2,399 2,326 1,098 411 180 4,402 2,094 9,961 9,958 3,265 7,938 514 174 2,388 6,887 65 4,371 778 2,954 1,958 1,111 1,736 1,435 810 6,412 3,972 1,120 3,540 2,635 1,791 827 980 554, 835 1, 138, 714 659, 128 804,555 481, 683 89, 740 526, 040 550, 275 316, 790 1, 869, 923 1, 336, 687 89, 581 523, 485 1,346,777 224, 447 699, 973 812, 530 68, 176 1, 183, 344 431, 495 938, 801 353, 646 996, 660 1, 341, 405 913, 865 374, 334 1, 765, 220 300, 918 558, 155 401, 495 674, 630 453, 490 357, 240 113, 945 319, 035 800, 723 328, 562 1, 034, 253 1, 128, 396 738, 368 819, 610 1, 074, 730 385, 587 503, 410 1, 363, 750 127, 705 131, 485 1, 599, 166 525, 550 424, 724 1, 502, 240 674, 433 266, 165 1, 971, 641 53.% 534 930, 105 751, 894 613, 509 559, 070 1,015,933 179, 055 292, 372 11, 942 57, 185 30,853 28, 009 20, 837 3,666 40, 710 26, 490 9,953 64, 713 79, 571 342 8,410 130, 480 9,248 24, 104 9,872 1,473 25,258 49, 759 19, 020 29, 467 16, 411 48, 127 58, 888 14, 874 53, 497 19, 036 75, 880 27, 900 12, 059 26, 160 5,943 2,437 270 173, 064 51, 740 36, 801 194, 863 18, 959 15, 868 26, 824 28, 548 27, 575 53, 646 675 4,937 54, 616 60, 479 25,971 34, 886 15, 668 20, 436 57, 171 85, 081 60, 169 98, 968 11,845 13, 279 10, 113 3,087 34, 931 100 50 120 95 20 84, 32, 1, 107, 38, 1, 2, 46, 41, 489, 6, 6, 10, 1, 433, 13, 36, 553, 36, 4, 33, 4, 356, 36, 10, 7, 6, 22, 82, 68, 14, 41, 21, 6, 14, 3, 37, 791, 25, 34, 27, 153, 23, 8, 10, 13, 2, 871, 8, 1, 65, 4, 9, 12, 136, 19, 159, 1, 202, 1, 356, 482, 357, 1, 396, 5, 13, 353 500 925 715 479 690 350 119 820 031 500 310 556 374 050 350 000 459 501 270 024 655 275 400 555 850 755 756 205 481 300 750 000 915 000 680 489 140 618 410 250 180 640 831 584 260 390 325 356 605 530 745 730 085 600 086 105 054 140 673 194 413 300 2 3.55 43 150 201 1,200 15 972 50 15, 162 26, 877 10, 296 26, 479 14, 436 2,161 9,742 17, 157 15, 649 65, 630 24, 959 2,723 12, 347 62, 916 8,829 24, 818 20, 059 1,788 22,327 15, 956 22, 949 8,926 19, 423 45, 400 22, 657 11,991 40, 192 12, 476 19,023 16, 425 17, 374 12, 875 7,381 3,313 2,580 20, 668 17, 950 29, 96a 33, 751 18, 615 19, 738 23,462 11,104 11, 535 49, 821 2,985 4,948 28,840 14, 798 11, 162 31, 481 22, 663 8,659 34, 947 20, 169 30, 435 35, 386 19, 171 19, 807 30, 312 7,570 11, 040 557 128 433 923 26 1C8 751 344 469 3,271 203 717 657 3,753 376 3,161 1,729 30 718 67 1,480 513 960 474 1,282 127 1,961 956 1,179 735 36 614 46 142 141 676 1,638 4,339 4,981 1,088 842 850 72 58 3,903 374 371 1,773 221 358 1,382 609 27 3,701 691 1,729 2,542 821 1,530 1,736 659 583 17, 185 27, 205 14, 329 19, 254 10, 521 2,565 7,442 15, 114 8,865 25,056 46, 179 3,182 8,957 29, 482 4,719 22,892 13, 640 1,855 10, 759 9i603 25, 485 8,786 27, 644 33, 144 16, 112 21,423 36, 459 13, 726 13, 743 11, 336 9,011. 9,003 7,002 3,254 2,961 37, 080 30, 851 40, 703 24, 901 14, 302 21, 686 15, 748 7,295 10, 507 31, 500 3,416 7, no 34, 229 11, 713 41, 556 18,625 16,865 5,781 37, 453 12, 835 £9, 058 21, 706 17, 100 11, 882 30, 250 5,120 8, 930 431 1,535 407 3,241 5,292 121 138 1,561 7,005 3,638 5,821 1,977 371 7,521 561 11, 740 1,184 545 703 2,158 4,426 4,444 2,503 5,592 1,353 2,803 5,125 3,055 3,167 2,623 270 630 521 344 12. 163 3,163 719 498 11. 164 622 287 3,105 700 077 7,696 2,244 796 5,094 1,590 2,823 3,508 593 137 7,598 4,048 1,449 4,545 697 1,511 4,008 2,681 1, 154 90 STATE OF MISSOURI. AGRICULTURE. COUHTIES. PRODUCED. o a 2 K Adair Andrew Atcliison Audraiu Barry Barton Bates Benton Bollinger Boone Buchanan Butler Caldwell Callaway Camden Cape Girardeau. Carroll Carter Cass Cedar , Chariton Chi-istian Clark Clay , Clinton Cole Cooper Crawford Dade Dallas Daviess , DeKalb Dent Douglas Dunklin Franklin Gasconade Gentry Greene Grundy Harrison Henry Hickory Holt Howard , Howell Iron Jackson Jasper Jefferson Johnson Knox Laclede Lafayette Lawrence Lewis Lincoln Linn Livingston Macon Madison Maries 571 11, 431 172 10 91 93 211 21 3,896 5,116 4,049 1,089 1,206 152 95 257 2,707 270 1,495 626 17 993 4,856 158 4,475 1,189 215 665 1,561 12 252 20 609 289 309 6,333 1,984 103 525 772 150 2,329 20 5,483 230 1,797 838 766 3S0 32 258 2,126 1,946 $1, 244 9,560 450 3,096 990 74 2,074 692 6,456 25,703 30, 657 266 2,936 28, 951 998 25, 451 6,887 465 8,553 906 2,701 24, 770 8,736 2,132 30, 063 2,941 2,858 1,429 6,154 5,637 312 79 235 10 9 542 64 110 40 75 50 1,305 47 140 25 20 175 17, 719 65, 813 161 10 270 1 40 :,833 580 1,372 1,225 9,742 41 3,105 7,306 1,628 105 3,266 765 20, 096 6,857 3,868 14, 152 3,404 2,244 8,704 2,355 2,461 35, 219 2,211 13, 910 133 3,034 ^7 56 1,506 13 273 75 274 61 55 518 1,449 7,507 8 1,943 118 6,659 615 2,299 3,707 6,315 151 651 4,342 21, 499 3,256 9,453 19, 804 1,598 143 17, 567 1,598 7,789 18, 489 5,129 3,481 9-, 791 5,113 3,018 362 5 850 6 ft 507 150 101 8,789 375 50 1,240 5,625 907 6,206 373 922 9,214 2,280 305 207 215 2,335 1,580 1,655 4,362 209 1,491 178 . 201 1,119 20 9,639 816 160 180 100 5,897 4,038 5 697 24,150 50 11, 179 200 100 35 8,950 15 2,183 26 9,890 9,320 273 1,224 123,028 221, 979 79, 993 127, 321 86, 031 28,945 78, 030 134, 806 63, 706 191, 329 165, 093 36, 295 114, 917 217, 514 45,622 95, 425 161, 099 16, 825 211,717 110,966, 172, 643 82, 645 185, 794 167, 060 117, 555 92, 119 208, 100 69, 132 62, 805 92, 010 18, 080 84, 677 33, 971 30, 400 32,854 177, 977 107, 833 253,278 177, 755 118, 729 148,253 142, 446 70, 094 86, 900 284, 182 32, 590 36, 790 188, 210 77, 433 84, 603 226, 565 116, 055 36, 152 258, 851 93, 981 183, 823 311, 090 125, 410 106, 358 203, 775 33, 291 71. 333 7,780 11, 476 3,105 1,721 318 1,690 1,735 2,856 1,030 1,028 40 3,338 615 912 1,012 1,5 7,730 2,862 1,425 2,258 10, 931 1,755 3,401 235 3,516 648 2,900 3,396 130 3,433 20 95 2,002 5,124 4,-457 6,605 10, 415 1,581 3,767 1,765 1,550 1,419 84 655 3,374 1,716 323 7,210 4,255 1,823 2,061 613 11,258 1,610 3,790 2,257 3,161 C25 840 4,730 6,937 4,031 4,825 1,535 750 2,546 2,525 416 8,390 7,408 23 3,279 11, 090 513 2,602 2,932 87 9 5 12 4 20 32 5,070 1,027 4,620 499 7,588 6,645 4,492 1,692 8,318 721 759 1,407 3,493 4,567 148 7 22 7 23 59 70 15 23 13 77 4,036 2,060 5,427 6,740 3,622 3,764 3,849 1,712 2,049 7,465 2 1,436 7,079 1,061 2,360 6,644 6,126 • 932 7,451 1,342 10, 661 7,494 3,049 3,331 5,617 848 727 4 3 74 45 16 13 2 3 43 29 33 2 118 65 26 1,611 764 156 802 87 155 418 379 15 411 196 271 39 213 1,388 1,6; 175 1,019 267 1,8 638 994 25 1,151 80 353 536 78 752 37 155 1,799 1,338 824 1,394 2,097 40 402 400 1,139 608 7 1,901 3,142 121 347 1,403 3,236 420 464 333 ],184 42 173 STATE OF MISSOURI. 91 AGEICDLTURE, PRODUCED. o s. ■a 1 •a 1 HEMP. i Pf 1 ■s ■a an f-s -a 1 ■s If It t □a Cm o a S 3. S t It as § i S o a 1 1 00 ■s o ■s 1 1 II If 1^ CD 1 1 ■a i It. r o 814 70 52 2 6,025 1,083 55 403 198 8.198 9,551 9,050 1,537 17, 006 1,591 9,747 12, 340 ,5, 651 9,330 262 570 1,380 632 600 150 58 154 236 193 196 827 11 1,860 720 174 6g4 1,'492 47 1, 700 260 1,040 90 997 1,563 1, 151 140 784 228 794 305 494 1,564 40 137 155 129 430 3,068 1,941 2,046 1,600 579 41 1,487 278 7 136 1,276 583 120 1,466 765 88 2,075 286 1,667 1,386 B74 2,178 2,309 233 266 26, 815 35,695 12.285 23,210 7,049 610 6,379 7,302 3,756 14, 514 18, 995 221 26, 739 13, 000 4,017 12, 576 26, 813 950 19,423 4,273 17, 542 7,328 24, 262 16, 265 33, 644 1,140 14, 748 2,709 10,554 4,577 20, 891 33, 400 108 1,182 5,935 839 4,247 79, 099 27, 305 33, 465 41, 476 23,281 260 24, 797 8,811 2,095 1,353 22, 232 8,617 605 33, 507 33, 006 1,365 15, 171 6,744 21, 080 19, 933 30, 176 28, 022 44, 645 1,714 5,153 $20, 554 20, 007 7,017 20, 523 20, 985 1,836 10, 036 10, 886 15, 850 33, 817 20, 346 4,631 17, 493 46, 876 8,125 29, 619 16, 690 2,615 25, 594 20. 619 16, 563 23, 806 6,898 21, 337 16, 519 4,649 17, 613 13, 396 28, 709 23, 898 11, 304 9,486 7,254 7,310 6,473 5,606 16, 518 26, 239 50, 721 26, 407 15, 080 24, 545 11, 355 8.657 43,263 9,033 4,895 21,837 19, 161 2,732 33, 690 14, 902 9,381 13, 639 19,353 19, 944 29,369 20, 354 17, 155 37, 411 7, 544 13, 979 $58, 161 115, 333 65, 945 93, 353 65, 759 14,549 63, 748 69, 303 63, 395 212, 965 208,836 20, 657 57, 970 193, 832 29, 254 136, 231 116, 186 8,064 147, 174 52, 244 156, 930 48, 435 133, 134 211, 521 88, 768 79, 520 181, 639 59, 076 61, 396 51, 250 57, 480 54, 395 38, 171 16, 275 40, 708 162, 446 ' 71, 803 100, 387 173, 924 69, 873 58, 373 105, 374 36, 178 48, 719 232, 403 17, 606 31, 407 215, 195 61, 634 100, 638 148,392 83, 347 36, 688 £50, 943 60, 114 143, 048 170, 611 80, 264 67, 750 137, 616 40, 347 47,272 127 216 1 30 179 410 127 165 2,432 1,366 2 1 8 26 6 165 86 595 10 12, 996 14, 336 135 215 35 1,054 6,220 1,479 5 110 4,261 425 1,177 35 540 15 8,685 5 3,225 603 1 171 4 21 3 6,115 1,408 5,120 1,201 35 786 216 10 7 691 612 4 8,618 1,620 10, 893 16, 641 8 20 580 130 710 365 3,480 480 5 315 1,755 1,123 3,752 1.075 93 25 6 24 18 185 5 50 1 3, 708 5,853 436 4,295 390 6,895 9,299 3,856 5,425 23 7,556 30 320 312 40 499 126 43 2 31 11 5 137 109 5 51 4,518 1,082' 2,365 5 20, 878 15, 463 12,230 6,608 8,769 4,101 1,798 433 2,630 22,230 20, 209 18, 313 24,239 17, 817 12,158 2,690 3,523 2,969 955 3,939 14, 773 30 13, 644 15, 988 4,335 4,139 19, 124 8,642 5,348 11, 551 11, 045 8,858 2,984 3,960 50 329 640 150 500 9 310 915 2,821 2,910 4,013 959 2,708 1,980 50 6 32 347 60 72 117 64 368 6 225 7 15 600 200 52 15 296 1,150 14 50 35 112 17 2,927 655 2,278 70 50 1,620 70 74 30 5 5 67 1,275 25 102 146 16 i 30 180 15 32 9 5,034 2,360 396 1,190 2,175 275 1,000 260 295 1,472 2,226 698 11 69 20 3 50 5 49 52 10 37 55 26 30 15 3,547 3 8 46 5 8' 1,140 14, 842 66 1,602 3 515 600 10 25 4,90] 70 106 92 STATE OF MISSOURI, AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. ACRES OF LAND. S 2 r .9 .a LIVE STOCK. 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 73 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 90 91 93 93 94 95 96 97 08 99 100 101 103 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 Marlon McDonald Mercer Miller Mississippi Moniteau Monroe Montgomery Morgan New Madrid — Newton Nodaway Oregon Osage Ozark Pemiscot Perry Pettis Phelps Pike Platte Polk Pulaski Putnam Ralls Randolph Ray Reynolds Ripley St. Charles St. Clair St. FrauQois Ste. Genevieve . St. Louis Saline Schuyler Scotland Scott Shannon Shelby Stoddard Stone Sullivan Taney Texas Vernon , Warren Washington Wayne Webster Wright 103, 472 14, 102 56, 577 29, 118 33, 624 74, 942 158, 563 75, 114 39, 393 40, 791 33, 346 15, 950 9,540 37, 734 8,143 11, 910 47, 084 96, 862 25,363 144, 524 121, 667 50, 780 12, .526 52, 724 83, 371 123, 214 102, 365 12, 033 10, 930 92, 173 27,723 32, 225 36, 043 108, 188 139, 527 40, 743 64, 714 21, 999 9,841 62, 829 26. 108 10. 109 57, 961 12,583 19, 706 27, 976 63, 595 32, 144 24, 045 27, 210 17, 187 101, 501 35, 115 161, 331 146, 284 80, 911 148, 650 191, 966 15,5, 869 154,898 86, 962 62, 958 45, 730 51, 944 197, 135 10, 076 -50, 153 140, 813 161, 774 88, 416 226, 515 121, 480 166, 951 27, 412 120, 621 101,359 150, 721 179, 804 63, 927 58, 672 120, 769 110, 137 102, 473 139, 335 113, 234 198, 267 78, 535 107, 496 53, 293 52,234 105, 038 170, 798 13, 128 232, 098 21, 138 118, 124 122, 333 115, 131 134, 106 122, 529 70,023 52, 689 13, 737, 939 $4, 113, 761 416, 480 1, 581, 530 953, 880 1, 381, 300 2, 345, 884 2, 973, 424 2, 330, 660 1, 572, 007 1,688,142 883, 612 682, 495 356, 350 1, 369, 166 84, 370 578, 915 1, 482, 013 4, 479, 867 332, 235 4, 974, 715 ,5, 584, 476 1, 694, 136 300, 605 1, 330, 615 2, 813, 403 3, 191, 090 3, 681, 350 330, 110 273, 280 4, 457, 541 861, 725 1, 132, 682 1, 055, 765 15, 987, 064 5, 550, 792 936, 425 1, 471, 789 626, 323 411, 200 2, 892, 020 859, 544 157, 822 3, 271, 606 209, 879 594, 772 1, 091, 776 1, 909, 747 1, 239, 070 660, 401 764, 390 380, 840 230, 633, 126 $114, 446 33, 538 80, 879 41, 176 47,725 97, 539 135, 656 95, 873 62, 694 41, 765 52, 746 22, ll5 15, 766 59, 993 5,127 18, 108 71, 666 110, 506 38, 934 169, 235 170, 563 77,638 17, 866 66, 723 99, 557 126, 005 133, 895 16, 214 17, 6.34 151, 718 47, 187 53,202 63, 908 245,238 170, 999 55, 452 70, 233 42, 353 19, 931 116, 223 38, 757 10, 499 91, 915 25, 592 37, 385 53,882 86, 952 53, 606 55,033 43, 494 22, 751 4,720 1,046 3,383 2,487 3,413 4,558 7,124 4,160 2,920 1,290 2,267 774 821 3,473 939 796 3,520 4,708 1,692 7,234 6,378 3,664 1,122 2,505 4,S33 5,660 6,297 1,199 937 5,061 1,956 2,346 2,036 6,193 5,493 3,143 2,657 1,247 709 3,475 1,545 1,102 3,596 1,638 1,692 2,008 3,631 3,231 1,874 2,440 1,125 1,162 174 161 300 608 560 1,783 735 639 1,178 549 162 68 435 83 202 251 1,557 503 1,879 1,551 1,215 106 104 979 1,684 1,255 108 104 749 355 535 239 1,210 2,852 111 173 324 49 615 233 130 350 312 248 170 392 558 163 928 194 4,542 973 3,383 2,628 1,960 3,949 5,921 3,806 3,062 1,977 2,187 1,116 741 3,454 1,386 1,531 3,862 4,056 1,684 6,380 5,339 2,955 990 2,446 3,843 4,493 5,252 1,357 1,056 4,685 2,381 2,539 3,604 8,231 6,023 2,096 3,611 1,316 1,000 3,350 1,935 1,190 3,531 1,941 2,075 2,354 3,585 2,655 2,090 1,871 1,190 985 591 1,884 1,434 833 1,927 1,042 1,251 1,367 808 1,392 710 730 1,675 948 426 1,066 2,004 1,463 1,912 2,919 2,103 792 1,650 1,013 1,109 3,050 902 649 1,182 1,338 903 1,433 1,357 2,446 1,003 1,168 586 801 1,271 1,321 907 1,981 1,373 1,783 1,254 885 1,250 984 1,620 1,066 10, 208 1,842 6,496 3,903 3,714 7,772 13,045 7,025 6,981 3,143 4,064 3,191 1,884 5,916 2,189 2,231 4,405 8,986 3,638 13, 047 9,251 6; 013 1,971 3,762 7,692 11,241 10, 694 2,359 2,481 8,886 4,241 5,037 4,209 6,053 12, 157 3,785 5,553 2,324 1,977 9,199 4,016 1,801 7,232 3,391 3,463 3,966 5,688 5,629 4,193 3,123 2,117 13,314 3,659 12, 192 7,038 1,354 12, 325 20, 781 10, 993 7,624 1,424 6,209 2,641 3,095 6,979 3,350 526 6,469 12, 951 4,822 26, 708 13, 060 10,488 2,977 7,832 11, 018 17, 180 15, 871 3,568 361, 874 80, 941 345, 243 166, 588 657, 153 2,350 8,650 5, 720 8,608 3,960 4,972 14, 967 7,853 9,354 2,203 2,904 11, 644 4,985 2,828 13,110 2,986 4,476 4,079 6,191 7,454 5,734 6,188 3,849 937, 445 STATE OF MISSOURI. 93 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. .a o o 37,423 8,361 25, 721 14, 888 32, 996 25,781 27, 715 24, 051 14,894 18, 888 14,571 6,221 8,204 25,804 6,656 10, 661 17, 162 19,266 11, 704 38, 826 44, 390 17,870 7,428 9,359 25,774 32, 958 45,281 8,267 5,674 33,673 U, 969 14,286 14, 361 25,391 58,512 13, 738 13,993 13, 074 5,599 27, 786 19, 916 7,116 24, 294 10, 170 11, 430 13, 653 22,897 15, 089 13, 026 10,971 8,536 2, 354, 425 $865, 530 134, 560 414, 000 319, 995 243, 365 560, 058 862, 753 566, 422 444, 147 279, 935 340, 579 136, 200 114, 681 407, 683 109, 164 161, 043 304, 525 833, 644 258, 689 1, 013, 863 913, 694 590,028 148, 475 348, 325 704, 008 846, 966 1, 168, 130 139, 061 130, 547 639, 831 203, 160 311, 378 282, 102 913, 866 1, 199, 206 321, 769 351, 443 171, 033 121, 555 674, 545 249, 030 140, 112 481, 169 218, 086 237, 898 316, 303 456, 621 332, 549 242,623 380, 187 156, 063 53, 693, 673 71,213 30,203 8,638 23, 192 30, 074 30, 719 18,094 27, 984 12, 144 20, 243 52, 707 14, 608 6,783 58,509 9,174 5,853 148, 322 21, 781 18, 774 142, 401 91, 273 50, 785 7,396 8,143 65, 975 8,359 24, 507 5,715 6,047 263, 409 12, 857 56, 814 112, 732 111, 478 56,294 4,264 10, 801 49, 811 4,323 7,675 24, 279 14, 013 10, 184 20, 360 16,228 2,786 68, 120 35, 963 20, 109 42,332 15, 870 4, 227, 586 2,206 1,952 8,875 1,089 40 ■554 8,214 636. 122 280 4,499 402 120 1,373 267 175 1,672 500 2,246 1,907 10, 226 2,894 610 6,105 447 2,804 2,853 1,725 54 734 457 3,261 949 5,224 4,051 4,681 4,099 440 778 2,541 695 487 4,095 2,344 1,461 220 1,003 5,119 801 3,992 1,028 293, 262 1, 168, 140 161, 394 715, 678 341, 670 543, 095 824, 170 1,277,617 645, 035 533. 570 802, 306 393, 637 267, 350 159, 190 402, 571 111, 610 197, 500 327, 340 1, 111, 840 244, 260 1, 079, 450 1, 783, 297 656, 877 205, 205 620, 105 766, 940 1, 152, 350 1, 670, 414 165, 740 127, 480 876, 405 367, 220 282, 300 273, 549 1, 022, 102 1, 859, 090 385, 615 671, 484 328, 940 134, 140 890, 835 320, 710 160, 310 559, 809 211, 405 300, 198 389, 013 651, 570 265, 751 273, 674 325, 570 239, 690 72, 892, 157 66, 042 23,345 22, 107 18, 279 1,280 2,700 38,789 51, 690 17, 996 1,123 49,285 10, 094 733 37, 711 1,367 95 19, 798 50, 122 27, 205 45, 195 74, 270 64, 634 7,687 6,188 45, 853 10, 705 14, 873 800 824 119, 874 33, 933 6,188 12, 263 172, 646 60, 918 7,159 8,422 2,028 1,580 25,583 3,699 6,299 19,102 2,559 7,928 26, 696 109, 370 14, 640 5,482 54, 294 6,363 3, 680, 870 453, 253 5,477 19, 513 60, 100 100 250 8,610 38, 625 1, 325, 384 587, 571 3,888 2,400 670 152 4,955 179, 454 7,915 3,320 4,285 30, 020 1,320 1, 194, 715 5,220 18, 320 2,600 49,021 46, 045 1, 918, 715 338, 865 3,714 5,425 363, 150 19, 963 9,070 37,250 10, 000 478, 010 118, 820 30, 207 16, 600 11, 495 391, 597 179, 920 12, 129 203, 549 27, 025 6,590 4,955 808, 518 1,460 54, 519 97, 300 10, 681 25, 086, 196 44 25 240 16 5 100 249 30 110 10, 877 19,100 41, 188 35,680 6,633 26, 271 13,625 2,606 22,274 45, 885 24,404 15, 211 40 11, 202 6,144 5,797 12, 389 4,024 811 14, 820 35, 129 10, 981 58, 805 31, 696 21, 932 5,634 18, 524 30, 613 36, 394 36, 655 5,322 4,721 17, 750 12, 054 13, 918 8,980 7,642 37, 824 17, 267 21, 017 4,499 5,894 27, 270 9, 114 5, 188 20, 008 6,049 9,194 9,484 16, 045 14, .323 11, 021 15, 418 9,496 2, 069, 778 480 627 1,784 90 589 5 2,180 536 354 320 16 10 502 666 90 550 1,993 81 1,390 531 1,353 81 10 677 381 878 4,248 120 909 1,750 264 480 926 1,012 3,504 1,038 487 885 3,219 2,787 566 1,014 38 255 433 439 365 708 279 558 107, 999 26, 544 5,982 22, 938 7,856 7,155 17, 816 19,232 14, 526 9,888 6,155 8,056 7,665 2,260 21, 162 2,099 3,248 16, Oil 8,534 10, 408 12, 345 44,887 12, 914 4, 3J3 14, 649 13. 062 18, 644 24,313 6.788 2,831 37, 301 9,479 12, 170 15, 264 260, .343 29, 387 JO, 643 12, 558 10, 342 4,968 27, 949 8,020 4,895 18, 640 2,647 7,580 6,167 23, 320 13, 686 6,008 7,140 4,955 1, 990, 850 2,480 2,407 1,093 2,280 2,944 2,519 5,268 3,896 2, 559 1,617 2,750 164 4,142 838 1,761 3,481 3,963 1,760 1,683 3,205 8,602 3,972 698 309 2,803 6,271 2,857 738 3,397 4,001 1,362 3,746 2,276 22, 172 2,338 160 573 4,576 2,963 2,319 11,536 1,762 578 1,491 1,987 500 1,916 1,260 5,760 2,752 525 94 STATE OF MISSOURI AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PEODUCED. s 63 64 65 66 *67 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 HI 112 113 Marion McDonald . Mercer Miller Moniteau Monroe Montgomery. Morgan New Madrid. Newton Nodaway Oregon Ozark , Pemiscot Perry Pettia , Phelps , Pike Platte Polk Pulaski Putnam Ralls Randolph Ray Reynolds Ripley St. Charles St. Clair St. Francois Ste. Genevieve . St. Louis Sahne Schuyler Scotland Scott Shannon Shelby...". Stoddard Stone Sullivan Taney Texas Vernon Warren Washington Wayne Webster Wright... 168 37 183 7 50 20 961 11 l50 18, 354 20, 691 367 10 324 1,701 55 10 6 40 127 •106 17,424 16 1,266 9, 827 13, 934 8,913 40 236 1,853 29 575 65 85 5,437 390 2,388 26 7,112 102 290 40 1,744 2,563 1,890 40 2 492 3 2,444 191 217 1,071 542 1,258 1,219 50 20 8,502 1,769 1,821 2,207 50 991 560 53 151 4,141 1,565 4,740 6,233 326 45 in, 202 93 53 9,040 63 736 1,175 118 87 161 21 182, 292 $18,617 711 4,958 3,838 3,090 2,043 7,696 7,473 4,031 1,178 135 2,098 100 415 18, 968 11, 570 3,840 15, 138 38, 199 3,440 140 383 10, 192 9,578 16, 789 246 241 22,878 1,530 11,051 13, 782 41, 579 13,155 405 1,620 1,423 275 4,187 1,401 738 1,739 258 172 1,273 9,488 8,875 1,361 1,516 935 810, 975 248 27 622 106 40 10 25 119 774 5 1 2,580 310 170 140 90 1,801 27, 827 $6, 626 40 197 200 1,520 1,776 5 100 125 1,137 246 099 2,006 2,138 300 453 950 1,230 575 95 1,628 71 30 163, 274 4,010 160 30 2,470 2,415 233 799 15 63 420 238 10 20 ■51 340, 405 174, 733 49, 993 177, 2S8 74,535 77, 480 105, 450 194, 547 97, 500 109, 667 140 72, 708 34, 395 36, 318 93, 758 29, 465 39, 190 52,623 138, 906 62, 545 206, 353 220, 815 158, 776 25, 270 216, 746 164, 967 135, 312 283,831 25,281 43,961 78, 672 75, 750 81, 709 64, 911 211, 047 275, 450 HO, 738 107, 057 23,855 39,735 305, 585 98, 985 31, 159 169, 847 45, 145 58,596 86, 829 HI, 710 34, 890 64,481 61,632 50, 323 12, 704, 837 3,129 685 6,527 1,989 3,540 3,127 1,532 85 575 2,510 260 490 335 208 960 4,935 810 1,741 2,364 2,511 1,115 1,110 2,196 1,610 8, .576 285 402 500 419 60 575 3,275 6,069 8,329 465 8,775 183 209 3,522 190 500 1,025 170 485 458 1,240 256 259, 633 9,958 379 3,503 1,055 279 2,834 7,829 3,841 2,105 18 1,120 4,785 43 1, 303 23 61 1,039 6,628 992 8,038 6,983 2,181 110 9,298 6,859 5,127 5,185 150 10 9,325 1,415 2,644 1,834 29,263 8,586 6,346 5,338 334 48 8,237 303 196 4,354 79 171 972 3,453 2,121 396 947 140 401, 070 76 65 17 6 12 11 4 25 51 7 14 1 1 2 22 191 14 6 3 43 10 14 52 21 103 1 47 41 3 38 29 552 414 357 .302 836 561 330 24 663 910 72 210 301 378 794 623 202 1,221 7 70 9 217 62 543 1,504 1,729 81 29 398 60 50 359 287 89 40 254 37 2,216 55,713 STATE OF MISSOURI. 95 AGRICULTURE. PKODUCEB. 1 1 1 1 HEMP. 1 o 1 Pi 1 1^ 1 i s OQ -a a i"S" s o o a CD to i g 1 If •3 iS 09 ■a ba 11 § h EC Cm O 1 o i a i is 1 h 1 a 1 i It 1 o 211 o 50 200 180 825 2,035 3,159 1,042 9 107 173 31 4 2,105 10 3,397 876 338 3,353 8,061 25,415 8,716 230 391 433 3,816 309 503 391 393 490 163 17, 410 6,448 58,506 4,390 7,540 8,388 30, 399 14,364 3,967 820,925 14,982 30, 938 17, 131 1,800 17, 304 33,271 13, 570 13,230 $177, 843 30, 643 80, 477 50,925 54,450 91, 812 139.051 89, 867 61, 490 63 64 65 5 66 50 67 185 68 60 252 1,530 1,241 290 173 115 4 350 2,098 3,026 3,366 4,810 9,832 69 350 4 70 71 73 325 352 121 933 120 10, 679 873 1,890 8,398 3,010 353 236 7,629 6,809 12,354 5,308 21, 160 4,645 17, 704 2,895 3,903 13, 374 984 343 40 10,391 2,129 962 32 2,236 10,239 15, 727 2.39 45 127 324 47 3,018 254 6,830 2,150 3,506 3,308 853 23,602 3,089 8,115 2,444 39, 349 36, 173 9,050 8,635 38,068 17, 973 10, 364 67, 518 96a 533 4,034 1,825 3,098 1,417 395 81, 086 34,588 29,592 3,680 800 36,743 6,715 4,776 56, 635 942 2,124 12, 257 3,886 728 2,988 6,921 3,752 12, 131 13,170 6,834 23,481 5,848 1,907 13,033 13, 359 11,802 46, 157 24, 702 35,335 5,187 26, 119 26, 224 21, 494 110, 115 6,634 9,276 3,666 6,603 14,123 6,917 180 15,276 18,540 15, 572 2,323 10, 507 53,025 11, 486 5,596 37,847 9,266 13, 939 35, 939 7,317 10, 930 23,639 15, 657 10,294 51, 215 25, J 59 15,706 83, 385 17, 030 29, 324 62,063 110, 350 76, 856 231, 547 251, 702 81, 423 28, 330 59, 793 114, 701 120,802 254, 344 26. 756 30, 127 150. 006 41, 039 68,298 62, 861 114, 375 203, 617 54,586 79, 274 ■43. 385 30, 260 158,838 44, 094 22,863 76, 988 29,100 41,330 58,032 • ' 122,598 63, 598 59, 331 40, 143 37, 669 73 1 18 11 13 2 74 75 35 236 20 36 76 77 78 287 70 1,510 1,276 6 10 94 133 1,644 181 79 02 2 80 533 8,583 1,131 644 203 1,388 802 278 2,837 217 88 110 60 73 228 68 693 1,437 647 394 31 1,572 613 379 2,371 20 96 736 387 163 380 433 319 81 1,108 1,793 500 90 1,333 100 129 25 83 83 253 414 3,001 2,330 2,050 582 785 62 1 10 104 13, 015 3,658 760 5,933 1,335 84 85 50 3 28 178 41 213 80 1 875 553 133 86 87 88 162 5 208 341 6,964 89 90 91 101 50 363 260 100 226 92 93 5 15 930 140 115 94 95 46 3,920 96 1,577 15 97 98 60 470 99 80 655 100 430 4,853 90 387 3,331 5 956 231 293 200 4,338 1,96& 1,690 77 3,341 6,731 3,003 5,153 19,336 4,712 13, 393 7,334 507 950 4,458 10, 953 9,029 101 371 8 4 176 102 103 861 1,548 520 40 18 104 105 40 106 80 11 14 13 107 loe 1,006 1,559 3,097 1,126 239 307 294 59 109 110 644 18 47 134 8 111 112 113 15, 788 1,507 1,972 109, 837 4,656 127 142,028 402 18,289 22,305 796, 111 79, 190 1,585,983 1,984,262 9, 844, 449 96 STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. ACRES OF LAND. a a a s LIVE STOCK. I S I CO Belknap Carroll Cheshire Coos Grafton Hillsborough Merrimack . . Rockingham. Strafford Sullivan Total... 148, 824 179, 060 260, 229 114, 820 436, 841 309, 790 - 327, 377 238,103 133, 574 218, 416 83,224 178, 333 97, 932 221, 113 258, 762 134, 825 / 146, 419 li:,240 60, 951 74, 792 $4, 215, 670 3, 699, 599 5, 981, 036 2, 806, 160 9, 972, 260 10, 279, 306 10, 213, 110 11, 790, 310 5, 931, 755 4, 800, 555 $141, 751 168, 047 253, 127 173, 551 470, 166 362, 733 366, 214 379, 749 217, 015 150, 659 2,395 3,235 3,810 2,802 7,876 5,082 5,146 4,644 2,370 3,741 5,698 7,250 8,453 5,573 15, 371 15,285 12, 331 11, 409 5,956 7,554 3,887 5,663 4,095 2,812 8,555 5,770 7,228 6,244 3,913 3,345 8,940 9,951 11, 447 7,749 20, 272 15," 831 .17, 810 10,229 5,317 10,529 12,275 12,194 39, 679 15, 115 100,465 14,835 45, 270 11,697 6,897 52, 107 2, 367, 034 1, 3T7, 591 69, 689, 761 2, 683, 012 41, 101 10 94, 880 51,512 118, 075 310, 534 AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. o 1 1 1 = 1 1 1° |l § 1 o g § a > 1 s ■3 DO •a a g p. s .a o 1 1 .a 1 ° o s .£3 » . •§"3 S 1 ■s 1 w 1 3,124 1,031 21,044 7, .331 7,517 11,998 9,481 33,568 16,843 9,166 603 2,183 2,835 56,740 15, 506 3,983 3,806 903 90 3,347 $28,364 37,226 22,222 384 38,273 88,346 216, 273 87, 017 26,925 12,904 563 166. 1,029 2 1.110 ?,677 1,576 1,132 1,041 105 $2,380 155 1,944 13,325 5,616 22,018 6',096 14, 015 9,997 710 396, 124 661, 090 567, 390 390, 231 1,346,324 908,399 844, 326 829,401 428, 206 585,273 175, 926 90,972 236, 215 113, 293 400,478 225, 648 434,639 212, 842 164,248 177,831 46, 500 49, 952 56,838 35,302 111, 449 83,945 85,812 76,264 43,926 52, 753 30 56 278 834 10, 708 533 152 7 226 102 297 2,246 783 759 575 97 38 446 12 2,361 8,393 7,299 37, 696 38,806 24,231 332 2,651 13,647 o 1 4 Coos ■i Grafton 6 Hillsborough 7 8 Rocking-harp 9 Strafford in Sullivan'. 92 121,103 89,996 557, 934 9,401 76,256 6, 956, 764 2,232,092 642, 741 12, 690 5, .569 130,428 STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. 97 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. 1 ■s o 1 o ■s 1 •3 ■s 1 1 1 = s ■■3 a 1 1 1 o 1 o s g g 1 Ginned cotton, bales o£ 400 lbs. each. o •o o 1. i r it s - hi l 2,755 3,801 4 890 $725, 991 824, 894 1,007,753 610, 311 2, 074, 264 1,387,973 1, 482,»i70 1,222,351 686,349 901, 971 19, 965 20,831 21,273 14, 732 57,632 32,312 31,632 7,109 5,317 28,162 4,698 7,098 16, 264 7,797 20,530 28,553 14, 662 12, 917 4,910 10,818 90, 619 105, 475 138 728 9,167 162, 191 217, 257 230, 333 238, 340 99, 940 122, 578 44, 781 60, 170 125, 230 242, 542 371,209 112,989 141, 72'0 72,286 29,304 129, 002 10 42,202 38,620 153, 687 50,020 390,040 88, 850 155, 124 40, 801 25, 173 175, 705 5,346 8,045 5,404 3,009 13, 887 10, 250 11, 279 10,431 6,854 4,949 236, 559 317, 528 281, 882 535, 477 965, 659 374, 121 463, 158 425,217 275,570 262,372 1 - o 18,553 3 2,574 8,748 7,665 7,515 7,253 3,794 2,940 4 12 5 20 6 6 7 135 a 9 6 10 51 935 10, 924, 627 238,965 128, 247 1, 414, 628 1,339,233 18,581 1,160,222 79,454 4,137,543 161 AGRICULTURE. PKODTJCED. 1 cS > 1 1 1 1 HEMP. o [&, 1 i ■s % 1 i 1 o p< o o □0 •a fl g ft bo o g 1 <4-l O « P. H O g 8 od" S „ s - o m a 1 1 o f o 1 i -a" 1 i . r 1 £ ft ft s 70 42 60 418 628 » 23 48 SO 8 2 2 49, 153 244, 441 450, 237 300, 858 657, 116 40,547 90, 081 4,034 2,961 415,584 2,884 2,854 11,625 45 10, 640 4,960 4,826 1,060 624 4,315 218 511 557 182 1,569 578 435 388 220 278 6,814 4,529 6,541 21, 697 41, 652 9,948 16,425 6,758 5,032 5,746 $1, 951 9,716 26,062 11,475 127, 320 4,977 3,054 54,757 3,527 8,213 $112,311 HO, 907 185, 739 97, 426 310, 462 393, 444 2,026,320 262,022 132,760 156, 109 1 2 6 3 50 13 10 4 7 5 7 *!. 6 1 7 6 3 8 9 10 18 50 13 1,347 30 1 2,255,012 43,833 4,936 125,142 251,052 3,787,500 13 98 STATE OF NEW JERSEY, AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. ACRES OP LAND. B 3) "^ a S 3 LIVE STOCK. ■3 o Atlantic Bergen Burlington . . Camden Cape May . . . Cumberland . Essex Gloucester... Hudson Hunterdbn .. Mercer Middlesex . . . Monmouth • - Morris Ocean Passaic ., Salem Somerset Sussex Union .' "Wan-en 7,897 86, 703 170, 677 55, 733 19,528 63, 276 33, 678 85, 944 7,375 203, 734 107, 591 106, 306 138, 081 138, 093 37, 746 41, 931 113, 572 152, 899 175, 894 56, 154 143, 739 61, 890 36, 457 113, 331 17, 837 48, 430 46, 708 16, 565 36, 155 1,421 45, 740 19, 824 39, 673 66, 435 119, 238 81, 131 48, 450 35, 631 31, 361 85, 335 10, 688 85, 804 $686, 350 11,834,825 17, 552, 539 5, 992, 105 1, 462, 400 4, 395, 875 5, 333, 075 7, 963, 445 5, 106, 350 15, 834, 190 10, 714, 344 9, 916, 005 16, 295, 970 10, 462, 026 2, 318, 80(! 3, 769, 895 10, 241, 468 11, 922, 419 11, 105, 233 4, 770, 150 12, 685, 074 $14, 709 340, 845 556, 411 158, 005 66, 750 162, 230 148, 218 289,636 66, 815 713, 850 366, 543 298, 142 510, 785 307, 646 78, 748 83, 865 341, 493 428, 124 296, 390 138, 556 378, 906 420 3,402 6,935 2,119 863 3,005 3,096 3,673 562 9,421 4,265 4,403 6,369 5,145 1,155 1,494 5,251 6,153 5,026 1,704 6,257 196 778 253 81 270 44 175 9 463 454 712 966 312 265 118 579 369 96 42 180 839 5,129 15,397 4,129 1,988 4,419 3,914 5,681 807 12, 037 6,571 6,044 8,300 9,693 2,236 3,403 7,104 8,587 19, 240 3,220 10, 180 67 1,323 815 20 153 232 486 28 122 580 228 523 466 1,803 ,197 1,027 30 704 1,271 399 194 1,944,441 1,039,084 180,350,338 5,746,567 6,362 138, 818 10, 067 1,130 2,781 7,349 1,525 2,602 4,719 1,958 2,993 187 8,597 4,277 4,571 6,795 7,273 2,347 2,844 6,700 6,405 8,618 1,531 4,717 23,411 1,615 2,617 4,177 281 1,918 50 19,320 8,850 4,098 16,644 11, 654 2,569 2,129 6,413 8,455 6,137 1,032 12, 517 135, 228 AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. o n •3 1 J J 1 O 1 1 o & v; a ° It "S ^ V 1 -a a o 1 o •a a 1 i 1 o S. 'i 1 I 5 "3 1 1 1 Atlantic 36 367 695 60 58 266 504 60 200 4,362 833 1,167 4,295 2,075 4,267 54, 650 36,844 8,360 4,013 25,117 16, 042 13, 501 220 91, 835 48, 950 57,838 25, 337 131, 548 10,220 33, 403 23, 150 41,349 142, 553 15, 799 103, 501 $494 31 632 53, 097 10, 188 1,837 6,173 15, 104 15, 532 12, 063 60,227 54, 491 21, 046 25,460 21, 243 1,438 2,434 37, 788 26, 843 18, 896 9,323 14, 104 $4, 134 295,540 267,217 193, 738 10, 595 17, 223 140, 669 44, 500 210, 765 2,401 37,887 43,029 133,364 8,600 5,116 42, 040 18, 340 3,059 56,720 5,545 1,614 35,625 440, 488 694, 475 418, 217 59, 670 241, 079 292, 9a3 298, 500 14, 826 1,010,674 475, 860 451, 644 609, 899 706, 687 111, 895 295, 153 373, 363 833, 845 3, 043, 987 338,285 1, 079, 343 125 6,703 22, 269 60, 565 14, 574 11, 165 26, 947 16, 885 21,230 3,917 31,403 21, 199 27, 760 34,813 38, 196 10, 862 13,302 35, 698 31, 069 43, 078 12,258 24, 843 1 93 335 101 55 4 1,845 89 o 256 6,672 17 58 92 630 421 313 4,328 153 1,937 703 613 5 30 966 2,205 1,382 83 219 ^ 97,158 8,786 812 32 13 148 37 53 4 5 Cape May (> Cumberland 940 70 6,480 30 190 1,982 330 3,510 4 4,040 2,125 13,737 600 43, 075 2,830 4 846 1,951 16 29 7 R q Hudaon "in 8,483 2,701 2,723 1,073 3,145 41 70 5,227 3,912 2,287 44 5,300 8,420 474 297 610 194 20 2 74,645 1,783 602 44 1,017 1, 114 313 103 12 4 61 n ^^ n 1*1 Ti ifi Passaic 25 403 2,933 5, 344 140 1,202 17 437 123 82 IB IP 90 Union 9,1 Warren 290 24, 915 877, 386 439, 403 21, 083 1, 541, 993 10, 714, 447 182. 173 85, 408 3,722 . STATE OF NEW JERSEY. 99 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. SD 1 o I o •3 •s .i 1 CM o •g s k 1 1 1 = 1 t .a 1 o □a '0 i S O f g o o 1 -»* a. Tj- n ^ a o '6 o 1 o 1 i i ii t-1 1 1 1,066 $79,002 733, 476 1,727,430 351,303 174, 903 482, 665 519,745 663, 806 84,205 1,602,383 859, 825 868, 691 1, 397, 445 1,090,484 257, 085 375, 596 952,594 1,091,906 1, 396, 472 309, 958 1, 115, 719 6,889 6,530 182, 212 69,476 21,308 114,348 11,731 69, 997 1,692 241,805 136,654 103,613 143, 256 59,653 10, 001 6,688 233, 494 131,166 25,176 10,631 176,898 6,391 90, 669 172, 872 35,599 2,411 12,083 26,740 42, 139 3,005 120, 741 36, 049 55, 795 97,224 73, 106 34, 893 45, 145 15, 343 98,927 238,232 15, 010 217, 123 46,217 182, 127 1, 031, 224 291, 522 120, 445 472, 747 15.3, 818 425,033 23,542 1,085,711 594, 897 487, 115 859,877 638,384 164,548 113, 890 749, 781 748, 730 505, 341 194, 580 833,807 2,302 93, 732 239, 603 24,820 19,989 118, 405 54,565 19, 419 9,924 830,653. 475, 963 350,592 233,014 354, 920 12, 519 57, 911 211, 182 741,228 274, 915 100,576 312,900 1,251 2,192 57, 727 3,695 5,271 9,920 619 4,532 237 1,237 3,777 2,627 257 454 . 1,129 1,]55 1,847 2,926 2,038 2,094 5B7 1, 683 245 743 568 1,802 186 275 1,^37 16, 657 229, 902 , 485, 260 354, 585 36, 528 162, 941 78, 688 300 847 1S1, 3b9 92,985' 140, 991 156, 102 1, 051, 525 139, 208 61, 962 95, 055 425, 272 62, 065 113, 098 54, 660 93, 970 6,494 5,753 300 85,300 38,723 - 117, 819 87, 148 21, 700 44, 648 167 585, 756 515 480 8,133 12, 151 42, 029 101 6,501 2 100,865 350 10 ]2 50 7,880 4 2,832 7,540 2,567 1,550 12,442 773 280 1 47, 300 17,829 57, 161 16, 126 8,718 38,183 28,603 7,844 5,766 17, 929 18, 826 21, 507 2,437 40, 943 14, 799 11 y.i 7,957 25, 109 1,400 11,430 8 10 225 212 1,250 9,139 6,411 15 3,261 14,208 8,745 25,165 2,153 21, 735 219 236,089 16, 134, 693 1., 763, 218 1, 439, 497 9, 723, 336 4, 539, 132 149, 485 349,250 27, 674 4, 171, 690 I, 034, 832 AGRICULTURE, PRODUCED. 1 3 > •a t-< -2 1 a 1 HEMP. ■s" 00 O P. a t 1 ■a 1 1 i » M to 1 to o §■ s Cane sugar, hhds. of 1,000 pounds. i Il 1 M ^ a ° il & O n •a a 1 1 ■f 1 1 1.^ ■ Il a 1 1 r 1^ 1 •a if o 280 90 115 321 33 2,086 5,695 10, 615 ■ 816 745 9,036 3,495 462 lOQ 19,161 7,825 8,137 9,322 31, 886 1,575 7,162 12,273 8,772 25, 187 2,994 18, 581 $511 $24, 522 108, 795 669, 126 136, 399 55, 649 150, 603 275, 656 237,623 1,230 291, 661 227, 216 168, 307 312, 853 210, 856 103, 143 59,076 280, 021 240, 685 308, 319 41,703 216, 833 1 145 324 55 36 375 253 1,340 602 120 ;t 4 20 2,773 2,432 8 13] 126 6 50 20 1 1 7 8 345 2,994 9 44,589 1,775 2,674 178 9 42 263 909 294 369 608 1,801 85 141 185 388 1,095 388 1,051 in 20 11 3,079 250 3,777 5,109 20 2,166 990 1,220 12 2,088 13 200 454 215 14 15 16 5 156 8 142 17 1,578 125 18 2,995 12 19 20 60 3 286 9 4,437 21 230 1 200 48, 651 3,841 3,455 8,088 396 8,130 185, 925 27,588 4,120,270 _ 100 STATE OF NEW YORK, AGEICULTUEE. COUNTIES. ACRES OF LAND. .1 p. >. LIVE STOCK. ^' ^' . v/ i^.^l^ L l!£lil'^ 1^^ !■ Albany Allegany Broome Cattaraugus . Cayuga Chautauqua . Chemung Chenango — Clinton Columbia Cortland Delaware . . - Dutchess Erie Essex ■ Franklin Fulton Genesee Grreene Hamilton -Herkimer - . . Jefferson Kings Lewis Livingston .. Madison Monroe Montgomery. New York... Niagara Oneida Onondaga . . . Ontario Qrange Orleans Oswego Otsego Putnam Queens Beusselaer .. Richmond . . . RoclUand St. Lawrence Saratoga — Schenectady. Schoharie ... Schuyler Seneca Steuben Suffolk Sullivan Tioga Tompkins — Ulster , Warren Wasliington . Wayne Westchester . . Wyoming — Yates Total.... 246, 098 288,240 186, 530 297, 134 315, 183 388, 154 117; 998 379, 520 188, 146 347, 840 206, 750 414,014 392, 664 364, 710 188, 481 176, 899 133, 108 222, 718 226, 745 18, 589 279, 398 510, 920 16, 006 177, 031 274, 069 278, 960 315, 142 200, 360 1,275 231, 865 446, 693 346, 120 300, 465 297, 987 183, 492 246, 676 459, 615 94, 726 115, 564 276, 008 9,852 41, 342 571, 973 316, 746 98, 170 265, 885 147,234 150, 357 395, 175 149, 182 139, 296 167, 614 205, 495 263, 910 119, 157 345, 048 180, 237 234, 071 253, 236 154, 531 58, 745 220, 085 121, 700 257,279 91, 325 210, 093 76, 095 150, 737 126, 954 52, 027 88, 576 316, 84S 79,609 166, 829 255, 783 144, 550 66, 970 56, 043 105, 560 32, 930 124, 839 293, 490 1,031 108, 960 93, 009 80, 788 58,507 35, 762 310 71, 796 186, 087 87,043 79, 394 81, 596 45, 006 146, 500 159, 608 35, 244 43, 549 70, 809 4, 743 24, 994 278, 130 103, 867 31, 483 103, 803 55, 239 33, 631 320, 293 215, 071 185, 683 102, 561 62, 999 160, 965 123, 915 98, 038 63, 039 25, 073 94, 150 48,227 $15, 11, 164, 441 188, 733 671, 591 210, 205 584, 477 419, 422 156, 967 750, 987 921, 167 270, 066 846, 985 967, 050 005, 990 935, 213 709, 701 384, 796 656, 050 885, 417 975, 640 321, 197 583, 798 542, 788 247, 950 264, 029 987, 573 251, 554 209, 862 032, 029 561, 350 398, 984 931, 388 959„117 644, 392 010, 783 123, 723 585, 540 807, 944 874,210 090, 150 774, 563 337, 800 693, 250 443, 701 290, 241 374, 039 815, 867 207, 612 851, 370 665, 991 641, 940 202, 980 931, 129 940, 774 697, 101 802, 399 837, 669 951, 988 001, 624 17,3, 680 325, 620 435, 323, 494, 810, 693, 200, 694 301 727, 378, 547, 94.5, 898, 201, 333, 202, 485, 311, 20, 134, 370, 654, 535, 899, 452, 50, 527, 818, 851, 681, 638, 401, 560, 664, 184, 703, 634, 81 114, 943, 530, 269, 569, 346, 381, 644, 378, 209, 298, 379, 488, 149, 63;, 371, 608, 429, 380, 9,133 9,812 5, 114' 9,186 14, 149 12, 497 3,871 10, 611 7,595 9,009 6,737 9,211 9,770 14,736 6,135 6,807 3,870 10, 572 5,468 336 8,631 16, 343 1, 543 5,222 11, 678 10, 240 15, 905 7,650 441 11, 712 15, 030 15, 446 12, 547 7,988 8,756 10, 471 13, 733 1,960 7,258 8,529 561 1,883 19, 915 9,919 3,814 9,063 5, 726 7,169 13, 340 7,322 2,648 5,770 8,263 8,198 3,083 10, 544 8,679 6,567 9, 275 6,284 21 16 64 25 1 15 20 3 200 3 14 100 4 5 4 6 9 5 47 159 54 11 8 48 7 66 2 47 13, 759 17, 184 14, 331 23,928 20, 084 38, 930 8,541 42, 094 10, 479 15, 503 26,722 38, 686 23,960 28, 092 8,286 14, 741 9,398 10, 343 13, 424 913 41, 566 59, 513 1,411 26, 373 12, 149 26,223 17, 073 20,424 495 12, 691 48, 510 24,940 12, 413 40, 406 9,353 21, 033 36, 847 8,997 8,721 16, 787 763 3,039 68, 734 16, 035 6,205 20,3^ 7, 507 7,196 32,020 10, 568 11, 263 13, 111 14, 487 17,380 5,971 19, 224 11, 263 18, 956 16, 631 7,748 1,907 2,738 2,734 3,609 1,983 3,515 1,336 2,928 1,320 3,876 1,566 5,057 0,242 2,411 1,841 2,147 1,003 762 2,404 316 822 2,114 28 2,195 804 1,347 1,021 731 16 980 2,972 1,579 1,266 2,830 765 3,426 3,285 1,900 1,482 2,359 299 480 4,232 2,522 500 2,367 1,298 593 3, 822 1,4J_6 4,864 2,114 ' 1,422 4,876 1,734 1,086 998 4, 943 1, 328 593 7,868 15, 145 9,230 17, 836 19,229 21, 788 6,534 22,546 12, 416 9,362 11, 169 17, 868 12, 858 15, 414 12,168 10, 820 6, 920 12, 681 8,223 986 12, 434 23,554 99 9,552 17, 692 16, 398 17, 624 11, 861 49 12, 528 23,338 19,584 13, 438 8,120 12, 655 12, 797 20, 093 3,319 3,941 9,806 534 1,652 35,273 13, 466 5,789 15, 031 7,719 8,847 22,315 10,310 10, 874 9,776 12,489 12,025 5,570 17, 361 11, 993 5,161 14, 099 8,726 33, 633 81, 453 S3, 053 40, 058 78,391 54, 503 12, 590 43, 857 31, 808 77,158 39,604 43, 692 60, 910 42, 767 45, 265 22, 750 13, 057 87,829 20,091 1,827 11, 780 34, 665 34 9,605 126, 836 55, 316 102,323 16, 936 40 79, 731 33, 016 81,677 129, 141 14, 763 83,436 25,203 63,887 4,658 5,079 64, 794, 20 1,318 56,523 49, 495 8,795 34, 978 46, 492 33,279 135, 308 19,520 10, 844 30, 490 49, 043 17,283 17, 379 113, 604 45, 710 6,957 82, 359 72, 344 14, 358, 403 0, 616, 555 803, 343, 593 29, 166, 695 503, 725 1,553 1, 123, 634 121,703 ,^i 727, 837> !, 617, 865. STATE OF NEW YORK, 101 AGRICULTURE. ihvE STOCK. a/- i^ ■^ ..Af^ ^ PRODUCED. 3 1 !<■ J&: ^^- 9.a k/ Vlf 1?! «et ..^ 42, 2.38 8,813 8, 657 10, 532 25, 521 17, 904 8,275 14,836 7,832 28,008 10, 403 14, 214 33,798 20, 656 5,923 6,829 4,193 21,538 8,284 359 13, 552 18, 071 1,880 8,246 20, 120 13, 144 36,229 14, 337 8171 21, 957 ,22, 030 29,553 26, 180 27,633 20, 916 15, 060 ' 14, 097 "^ 5, 948 14, 207 19, 089 1,081 2,530 27, 149 15, 193 7,538 13, 884 9,101 11, 625 21,243 17,834 6,037 9,018 12,602 28,890 3,836 20,353 19, 290 18, 148 9,3Q6 13, 492 910, 178' $1, 551, 840 1, 840, 143 1, 181, 135 1, 889, 122 2, 627, 802 2, 813, 331 801, 240 2, 797, 020 1, 0.33, 132 2, 080, 621 1, 680, 988 2, 708, 833 3, 137, 733 2, 467, 395 1, 016, 169 1, 130, 943 736, 391 1, 788. 740 1, 361. 402 88,257 2, 338, 859 3, 441, 925 215,171 1, 404, 247 2, 116, 311 2, 188, 197 2, 862, 177 1, 476, 9K5 77, 000 1, 818, 502 3, 258, 968 2,914,556 2, 410, 328 2, 574, 411 1, 470, 809 1, 885, 609 2, 845, 929 750, 020 1, 348, 919 1, 903, 351 149, 651 359, 705 3, 994, 406 1, 799, 822 692, 213 1, 805, 927 1, 076, 663 1, 153, 936 2, 600, 414 1, 314, 027 965, 698 1, 182, 028 — 1, 526, 031 1, 920, 323 590, 791 2,238,701 1,505,848 1, 953, 644 1, 730, 096 1, 262, 885 103, 856, 296 32,119 172, 198 67, 498 154, 173 536, 370 2.35, 427 94, 785 54, 623 112, 069 15, 018 61,388 57, 619 60,302 149, 399 69, 391 145, 158 19, 586 301, 144 21,540 1,921 48, 560 574, 369 21, 927 73, 502 270.785 156, 591 306, 868 47, 649 133, 862 93, 907 632, 566 490, 257 34,659 lis, 070 116, 433 ide, 552 "2, 156 134, 4-58 36,751 9,076 1,937 579, 810 34; 855 16, 186 93,272 169, 988 368, 296 430,158 174, 943 4,126 90, 969 194,057 11,594 30, 701 241, 004 24,200 193, 761 229,854 8, 681, 103 212, 315 10, 829 55, 127 4,046 ^ 15, 411 2,851 36, 750 27, 103 24, 325 547, 902 6,200 100, 713 369, 818 40, 653 19, 638 32, 041 29, 681 38, 430 121, 734 1,364 31,223 47, 134 4,493 11, 960 68, 560 16, 426 159,810 49, 875 69,428 45, 308 22, 208 73, 894 233, 848 77,022 72, 250 46, 609 23, .355 77, 79() 284, 273 5, 451 38,635 41,532 158, 490 57, 687 147, 311 43,350 2i, 300 88, 064 66, 854 131, 205 51,245 61, 171 332, 691 21, 800 136, 566 47, 077 114, 204 19, 613 100, 060 J J 262, 541 88, 826 149, 339 193, 029 895, 464 442, 937 173, 644 113, 266 113, 890 537, 113 115, 558 41, 813 687, 158 444, 364 94, 194 84, 900 64, 483 643, 220 185, 595 1,987 158, 441 435, 645 84, 782 43, 912 662, 715 313, 311 1, 183, 269 182, 021 2,450 731, 907 630, 328 906, 502 863, 267 538,743 523, 957 546, 835 93, 259 llB, 279 517, 758 392, 801 46, 865 81, 640 263, 562 400, 314 120, 168 130, 708 212, 934 630, 892 308, 802 560, 043 87, 649 213, 563 349, 473 375, 003 82, 894 473, 532 *624, 824 462, 986 185, 225 390, 492 20, 061, 049 891, 512 750, 891 540, 233 416,571 1, 100, 988 394, 550 584, 339 775, 523 491, 656 1, 118, 589 435; 551 790, 907 1,. 175, 430 684, 866 256,325 284, 229 357, 895 385, 317 405, 370 19,333 704, 217 571, 813 9,835 289, 734 614, 470 779, 437 1, 034, 033 1, 056, 651 10 625, 535 1, 089, 273 1, 197, 793 761, 150 513, 137 406, 747 402, 778 1, 344, 550 94,775 257, 951 764, 182 36, 335 54, 917 828,-007 811, 963 410, 623 890, 108 494, 545 672, 142 1, 294, 312 374, 726 180, 599 671, 006 865, -*i 579, 153 136, 489 788, 575 657, 126 , 351, 529 416, 968 402, 610 2,062 5 23, 643 330 307, 903 1,875 455, 831 15, 583 13 720 401 835 178, 130 25 87, .350 3,000 65 750 130 53, 697 163, 619 498, 97D 30, 030 320, 665 I, 939, 278 99, 030 170 42, 665 36, 830 6,015 600 2,000 205 35 1,600 800 3,280 142, 022 6,250 171, 657 5,000 522 17, 303 131, 405 6,435 35, 175, 134 , (. 38,280 2,935 28 45, 395 116, 839 283, 595 64, 668 132, 784 288, 958 193, 048 39, 702 167, 539 97, 849 266, 220 104, 699 127, 128 183, 657 148, 163 J62, 597 79, 030 40, 169 351, 249 59, 742 4,681 36, .350 123, 049 31, 464 4«4, 518 205, 309 388, 285 57, 970 361, 591 117, 435 330, 836 505, 546 31, 248 276, 881 85, 707 344, 118 13, 801 13, 536 217, 151 1,559 204, 490 157, 793 33, 613 114, 991 165, 800 114, 917 441, 747 53, 013 ^,654 8^,335 444, 770 48, 909 56,775 405, 597 158, 374 20, 425 339, 079 275, 341 38, 319 39, 584 2,584 19, 608 21, 561 8,568 3,136 7,973 28, 538 3,474 10, 547 3,632 1,037 33, 348 14, 442 33, 820 13, 413 59, 333 5,663 274 24, 917 79,238 9,761 23, 258 38, 138 43, 216 110, 153 46, 748 447 55, 632 36, 736 73, 287 49, 149 923 121,570 23, 803 40, 334 1,004 133, 922 7,480 377 16 92, 260 8,448 13, G30 50, 028 5,288 2,183 75, 037 2,659 1,383 4,154 7,114 1,370 3,123 11, 030 16, 323 1,361 45, 687 7,591 643, 868 548, 083 192, 813 469, 379 431, 433 512, 091 148, 533 309, 673 670, 276 492, 791 190, 181 429, 331 304, 458 956, 181 411, 777 895, 612 176, 660 457, 141 309, 067 47, 596 369, 511 555, 325 607, 183 330, 706 371, 739 337, 389 [, 313,315 183, 097 4,790 549, 404 938, 147 650, 227 504, 970 215, 106 298, 533 648, 903 562, 372 66, 741 693, 438 1, 026, 809 25, 756 66, 439 ,094,718 931, 577 196, 099 330, 479 166, 972 197, 952 651, 573 283, 273 185, 299 337, 866. 206, 347 313, 933 210, 029 ., 148, 430 323, 644 370, 607 396, 072 104, 748 634 80 60 4 161 363 147 44 299 140 232 63 .399 4 1 160 103 780 60 1,311 175 50 42 854 367 1.35 6 9, 454, 474 7 1, £09, 339' 26, 447, 394 7,529 102 STATE OF NEW YORK, ^ AGRICULTURE. =X COUNTIES', 1 PRODUCEDi *"- ^ t'^ 4 Ml m > ■ o 5 «"S g 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 33 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 .22 23 24 25 ^6 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 62 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 Albany Allegany Broome ...... Cattaraugus . . Cayuga Chautauqua . . Chemung Chenango Clinton Columbia Cortland Delaware DutchesB Erie Essex Franklin Pulton Genesee Oreene Hamilton Herkimer . Jefferson Kings Lewis Livingston — Madison Monroe Montgomery.. New York Niagara Oneida Onondaga Ontario Orange , Orleans Oswego Otsego Putnam Queens Rensselaer Richmond Rockland St. Lawrence. Saratoga Schenectady.. Schoharie Schuyler Seneca Steuben Suffolk.'. Sullivan Tioga Tompkins Ulster Warren Washington . . Wayne Westchester . . . Wyoming Yates 10,302 38,474 1,875 9,593 294, 604 17, 101 47, 246 6,114 25, 844 9,040 11, 468 3,800 3,366 96, 705 S, 792 14, 265 3,564 168, 284 2,079 82 16, 375 375, 464 54, 304 248, 181 39,224 300, 065 25,458 282, 659 36, 364 86,614 330, 123 160 139, Oil 14, 581 18, 543 106 4,109 15, 475 785 30 57, 150 2,759 4,944 30, 578 152, 480 171, 693 279, 714 16, 026 377 6,601 133, 119 298 591 8,195 175, 616 1,175 117, 572 293, 031 196, 149, 116, 62, 101, 41, 134, 85, 60, 156, 37, 222, 77, 80, 22, 27, 73, 57, 141, 6, 58, 7, 18, 95, 41, 67, 169, 49, 81, 72, 72, li, 32, 69, 185, 33, 66, 65, 1, 30, 31, 115, 73, 273, 146, 58, 326, 49, 113, 152, 175, 153, 34, 36, 67, 46, 62, 78, 1,263 28,753 10,376 141,030 73,026 16,641 46,222 '21, 747 58, 865 29, 496 27, 812 92,189 52, 390 26, 953 7,554 9,967 114, 994 51, 000 543 30, 863 45, 860 930 8,283 51,383 44, 377 367, 643 37, 196 300 243, 337 100, 016 106, 698 304,373 41, 371 237, 896 106, 993 43, 390 14, 113 62, 146 71,755 3,712 8,303 35,033 60, 190 17, 016 46, 757 37, 569 96, 071 32, 120 20, 387 14,831 26, 376 70, 312 34, 870 11, 516 68, 614 160, 517 151, 008 62, 252 74, 435 2,919 103 700 S5 763 1,351 1,080 278 787 1,764 343 114 3,303 75 195 50 108 866 705 338 1,399 558 734 1,687 5,485 1,184 1,435 1,351 3,090 5,338 457 1,133 372 1,160 397 1,407 273 316 1,837 538 1,425 511 1,545 888 1,303 141 747 875 1,597 191 1,342 971 1,829 356 1,130 $386, 241 3,799 4,122 15,325 14, 536 20,363 18,135 983 8,619 24, 873 8,347 360 30,880 39, 796 6,092 654 302 3,395 8,110 515 284 8,034 319, 134 134 4,489 3, 986 476, 158 1,876 392, 828 34, 185 29, 530 64, 774 38, 915 48, 815 2,932 23,768 1,220 1,070 886,934 57, 157 20,327 9,659 15,872 39,786 10,333 830 5,879 3,332 10, 117 17,559 170 1,362 4,082 34, 499 16, 619 , 7,689 12, 068 300, 540 6,288 3,346 1, 318, 1, 665, 1, 3, 334, 3, 084, 4, 479, 865, 5, 046, 894, 1, 401, 3, 375, 4, 966, 2. 134, 2,138, 034, 1, 497, 717, 959, 1, 394, 80, 1,251, I 4,1 124, 1,! 1, 151, 2. 135, 1,651, 1,1 1,357, \ 4, 140, '3,363, 1, 188, 3, 033, 854, 2, 171, 3, 286, 465, 505, 1,279, 7, 244, ' 7, 193, 1,500, 638, 3, 203, 705, 663, 1, 983, 749, 966, 1,317, 1,631, 1, 834, 643, 1,1 1, 315, 1,500, 72,005 939, 115 -53, 719 1, 857, 349 195, 505 1, 153, 2J7 11, 090 1,' 446, 538 87, 780 71, 330 828, 055 44, 777 40,553 2, 278, 376 106, 119 138, 776 665, 684 119, 503 21, 300 , 7, 170 10, 901, 533 4, 773, 109 2,911,775 235, 195 2, 589, 992 171, 960 2, 611, 448 107, 916 3, 519, 733 1, 127, 383 217, 934 143, 280 1, 108, 456 2, 161, 929 5,644 1,422 51 2, 353, 887 169, 489 84,361 113, 671 48, 886 15,284 231, 233 3,990 10, 552 47,837 55, 452 100 87,673 768, 320 144,640 1,340 981, 946 77, 496 73, 621 41, 768 58, 073 33,403 65, 031 84, 914 25,890 133, 431 35, 930 81, 256 82, 592 135, 840 100, 078 46, 461 36, 825 49, 358 34, 746 33,778 75, 433 5,256 107, 956 133, 400 7,086 72,296 37, 354 88,136 51, 019 57, 730 305 41,427 135, 812 77, 635 45, 360 98, 170 33, 378 63,217 124, 369 30,044 53,014 73, 413 7,515 13, 925 165, 634 63,933 34,143 61, 664 26, 319 27, 851 71,102 45, 208 46, 695 44, 527 48, 858 80, 933 24,258 88, 520 30, 120 87, 467 40, 472 23,979 11, 656 68 87 21 7,767 28 505 127 16 40 558 ,428 22 332 39 7 83 1,057 40 1 1,967 29 23 3,299 1,012 4,337 5,491 2, 164 69 8,389 5,231 1,215 2,353 60 3,381 5 393 39 35 561 1,059 10, 044 3,816 9,199 3,553 971 64 263 3,038 850 4,167 12 2,475 3 655 5,062 1,064 876 587 386 2,033 582 563 2,062 552 495 1,211 1,221 689 604 768 2,495 176 404 274 15 698 9,533 1,652 1,033 1,075 628 3,006 773 706 1,371 1,247 548 1,012 572 3,397 50 726 454 6 4,433 731 717 3,087 2,332 6,438 1,823 1,350 7,648 705 1,587 870 66 1,932 579 68 590 1,236 38,041 49 7,645 ^ 47 319 489 93 207,894 166 9, 677 166,568 1,714 8,-874 1,973 155, 675 48, 471 5,056 13, 7C0 453 707t910 33,913 15 19,590 6,521 1, 520, 657 32, 918 515, 584 8,605 838,460 41,208 108,264 90 5 37,405 3, 5077069 19 78' 16, 030 50 99, 833 12,561 13, 712 1, 441, 64§ 1,3 14 38, 547 94 46 307 1,095 5,515 267 4,427 4,575 180 7,411 49 4, 186, 668 1, 5, 126, 307 i 3, 726, 380 61, 407 3, 381, 596 103, 097, 28^' 48, 548, 289^ 3, 564, 793 'J 106, 934 81,625 9,671,931 STATE OF NEW YORK. 103 AGRICULTURE. / PRODUCED. / •i 9 \ s s •a § ■s ta "3 < HEMP. o 1 i 1 ° ■a a o IB o S s i t •a s o c a ■§1 ED 1 3! 1 ■2 . 1 a g g § 6,421 2,207 1,858 1,876 2,053 16,677 785 3,668 440 1,281 18,944 2,286 1,190 1,119 77 247 28,140 843 275 391 278 58 191 242 279 25 258 23 20 749 228 58 85 2 65 214 253 19 18,951 616,966 104,840 691,632 114, 183 594,232 27, 514 574, 980 207, 965 2,901 555,326 591,535 3,520 245, 870 121, 936 385,698 50,608 137,824 111,832 30,494 218, 167 857, 790 ' 665 4,693 1,457 ,ll2 2,984 3,585 1,479 4,917 967 335 2,414 11, 158 298 1,861 1,080 2,577 1,484 1,375 2,484 656 6,129 4,136 2,773 2,3P9 1,804 3,320 . 4,123 1,983 1,528 2,948 2,331 990 2,147 3,383 747 2,091 2,164 1,527 1,044 1,586 1,293 vV 295 ■./ 1,876 1,416 59,384 60,532 34,263 38,463 87,656 33, 099 38, 991 51,206 36, 057 42, 679 39,268 65, 807 19, 567 43, 278 31,231 23,906 18,128 37,454 42, 840 4,847 47, 936 22,933 175 17, 629 44, 241 62,954 54, 678 53,678 «9, 182 14,817 8,965 19,548 11,439 18,258 3,719 20,303 10,222 5,057 11, 182 22,833 3, 241 23,627 21,832 23,007 1,517 13, 375 3,910 1,638 19, 630 34,072 $290, 904 231,777 167, 898 235,954 441,263 324, 100 118,278 283,916 165,932 443,341 211,617 276, 277 620,418 315,661 152,465 141,688 118,696 297, 010 209,924 15,589 225,282 398,299 10,188 148, 287 325,332 252,935 628,050 145,418 175 313, 140 563,222 464,389 320,999 434, 677 253, 681 385, 642 319,887 238,551 232,655 327,595 1 AJL^^^-t^'i 2 axa.^ ,.- ^>J1 3 {3a_^ ^ ..v-i-- 1 18 1 6 CiL*.^*:!" ^ ^--'J 70^ .- fKJu^yv ■! 4 e'-L^^. ■ -■ AA 9 ciu^-vaC-K,' 101 'xJ-€jJ'-'vr-6 11 CLoaXL.,^ 1 12 A'^^"»-' 13 /^-lCCc-Ls..^ 14 f-^-t^^ 15 tL-^LS.^ 16 -Tp^-' ii^ 17 if-^o' frr 18 iX-t- l:.X ■■- >-«- 19 :'h,j. '^J- 20 \^- -1-. ■•-■- t''-- 15,789 72 952 73 21 At^i J A^V-y-> 1 5,716 1,096 282 84 141, 908 335 1,077 237 87 3,107 465, 680 24,767 230,542 15, 578 38,461 3,190 818 3,567 487 2,958- 911 2,401 2,417 2,056 3,512 10, 606 23,345 14,826 7,134 4,616 24 /I'AAT^-a 20 25 -^ '.-irtVli'*-'- 267>-.(..i><,* - 127 27 V-t-fVt -♦-^ 28 "Th-fr^^'i-ii 307>..,i-')-"-'^ 107 646 9,224 346 254 435 54 96 247 26W 4,665 204, 890 117,599 71,975 1,084 23,669 189, 397 469, 985 91 8 373 5,818 1,923 4,386 6 150 4,247 5,588 1,679 2,946 3,881 2,258 1,720 1,627 ' 2,568 4,656 735 196 2,573 32,033 57, 837 , 82,012 59,402 19, 13^ 32, 494 .*36, 594. 95,306 8,158 5,117 28,311 15,867 18, 160 10, 394 3,734 530 3,036 40, 310 14,771 1,731 3i(it-,si. ;^!., 33 ^^-r_t--,._i^<. 15 33 (^ iJtJu-r^■o 40 fJoiva-*-'-'-'^ 39,311 1,140 3,962 30 1, 378, 142 26, 310 4,540 135, 450 27,599 6,325 261,005 2 53 2,578 2,099 1,583 3,818 2,035 1,650 5,425 360 2,600 1,777 - 2,576 3,212 1,636 3,604 1,793 175 1,956 2,276 8,969' 44, 351 43, 683 25,621 78,562 45, 534 38,309 132,844 5,051 40,677 47, 674 54, 102 45, 924 19, 946 46, 693 32, 379 6,885 46, 317 37, 954 22 47,483 5,453 2,609 13,525 17, 944 1,015 89,300 1,050 6,076 7,S92 4,724 7,503 8,943 4,873 11, 685 323 9,489 4,592 61,426 494,513 331,093 129,552 239,849 128,182 167, 585 353,882 357, 694 143, 683 161,543 20S, 112 387, 846 96, 677 469, 263 278,129 428,376 201,816 147,071 42 l^^-..-l.. f_^_-. - 809 4,120 176, 373 34,203 842 3,323 2,090 20 50 791 '' 65, 236 6,234 165 428, 324 7,770 1 6,784 130 26 45 7,759 916 1,056 1,564 1,400 2,740 128 438 8,060 1,020 816 5, 838 75 1,910 1,331 1, 666 1,808 2,556 1,942 653 43 i(//Aa-h-'--' 44 5iL:' ik>T> <] 106 25 45 •-i'^.-VA-y^-^ t 46 ' r,L.»-^._*J 47 i' 75 50 $^-^ I'ltJUr 2 140 1, 451 165 ,2 13, 311 228 34,894 67,320 82,146 48, 048 74,026 49,033 10, 487 4 422, 164 26,623 51 iv "'<>^<^ 52 .> .-n,"^ 43 53 i. . . t*- ^' ■■■■ 54 ti^Ui"'- c'^-' 55 lxv-^S..VX.^^ 1 75 57 \r(,^:-^ 58 VJXA.r {i^ 985 470 3 3,419 940 59 V.i.4' ■V>V«.^E\ fio , * , r f ' ' 5 1 2 1, 518, 025 J 56, 991* ' 259 J 10,816,419, 516 .'ui?>: J 121, 020,; 2,369,751" 717,898 15,841,404 — 104 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA. AGRICULTURE. ACRES OP LAND. COUNTIES. S-4 p. >. f» LIVE STOCK. o Alamance — Alexander — Alleghany — Anson Ashe Beanfort Bertie Bladen Brunswick .. Buncombe... Burke Gabarras Caldwell Camden Carteret Caswell Catawba Chatham Cherokee Chowan Cleveland . . . Columbus . . . Craven Cumberland . Currituck . . . Davidson Davie Duplin Edgecomb... Porayth Franklin G-aston Gates G-ranville Greene Guilford Halifax Harnett Haywood . . . Henderson... Hertford Hyde Iredell Jackson Johnson Jones Lenoir 110, 655 38, 847 30, 786 10,3, 391 54,804 32, 026 117, 806 55, 274 21, 511 72,755 33,253 83,105 41, 107 62, 382 10, 388 168, 878 67, 833 154, 505' 44, 981 41,330 79, 001 35, 364 63, 345 54, 446 36, 561 121, 017 59, 974 106, 176 134, 758 72, 509 118, 9G8 52, 824 72, 678 197, 489 63, 667 195, 713 147, 615 46, 667 33, 686 43, 479 73, 270 31, 988 96, 078 86, 145 109, 740 55, 110 111, 183 109, 538 103, 707 87,451 210, 366 186, 483 226, 721 225, 640 459, 362 303, 553 281, 200 126, 986 124, 471 139, 808 54, 374 51, 055 90,224 153, 782 340, 092 374, 319 72, 607 172, 426 322, 702 299, 145 404, 884 68,292 198, 726 93,004 339, 987 174, 632 132, 212 180,816 167,382 83, 673 243, 713 87, 603 180, 824 248, 825 241,403 308,067 150, 519 133, 652 90, 576 226, 573 320, 038 224, 820 124, 787 161, 470 $1, 512, 700 656, 969 482, 244 1, 711, 978 555, 503 1, 139, 020 2,061,153 2,244,488 755, 766 1, 957, 951 784, 793 1, 812, 519 879, 035 1, 865, 734 411, 945 3, 848, 743 1, 715, 639 2, 354, 683 1, 337, 269 989, 606 1, 310, 613 1, 081, 225 1, 376, 387 1, 536, 839 1, 175, 485 1, 988, 464 1, 388, 642 3, 131, 621 4, 974, 920 1, 174, 800 2, 453, 259 1, 529, 274 934, 908 3, 457, 365 1, 658, 998 3, 406, 736 3, 699, 426 , 992, 531 730, 397 1, 515, 097 1, 321, 818 1, 700, 075 2, 292, 844 616, 119 1, 750, 771 963, 266 2, 432, 030 $95, 994 34,002 19, 026 74, 104 33, 942 35, 230 62, 057 87, 504 43, 406 107, 463 41, 066 93, 645 34, 034 40, 421 10,355 90, 094 85, 611 129, 641 41, 780 40, 335 70, 462 36, 472 46, 754 45, 867 36, 446 118, 483 57, 756 84, 417 196, 756 89, 026 99,969 66, 267 32, 370 127, 072 46, 168 150, 059 114, 788 35, 131 35, 882 47,340 46, 582 35, 121 107, 459 22, 481 101, 770 29, 282 56, 832 2,722 1,219 1,079 1,726 1,735 918 1,744 947 649 2,407 989 2,560 1,110 1,043 381 2,357 2,253 3,923 1,576 691 1,019 804 1,032 1,239 1,005 3,556 1,689 2,033 2,024 2,275 1,980 1,653 1,147 4,294 1,108 3,949 1,994 1,019 1,255 1,402 1,144 899 3,147 1,353 2,236 825 1,230 242 519 31 1,129 112 288 1,265 527 345 1,037 670 824 488 S>26 62 692 755 1,269 426 525 981 314 340 085 168 634 475 408 2,002 318 607 853 269 665 549 600 1,815 436 338 493 569 146 1,021 203 772 363 725 2,970 1,649 1, 541 2,839 3,059 3,723 3,558 3,257 2,852 3,619 1,489 2,889 1,644 1,363 787 2,862 2,752 5,833 2,600 1,131 2,998 2,944 3,772 2,921 1,507 4,116 1,797 4,259 2,793 2,634 3,121 2,299 1,431 5,102 1,068 5,288 3,409 2,035 1,580 2,336 1,408 1,607 3,792 1,907 4,343 1,539 2,076 122 300 160 947 659 731 988 501 829 462 90 51 299 227 275 418 35 327 1, 069^ 353 137 769 800 215 436 119 142 961 1,437 211 1,254 25 558 856 673 843 2,231 296 162 816 663 604 248 386 1,132 493 680 4,120 2,692 2,829 4,358 4,423 9,782 9,544 6,337 5,687 6,223 2,745 4,856 3,226 2,377 1,874 4,848 3,243 7,499 5,702 2,358 3,667 7,538 9,541 5,401 4,747 4,805 3,106 7,159 5,862 3,546 4^515 3,196 4,909 9^097 2,428 7,550 6,057 4,506 3, 921 3,880 2,942 4,930 6,500 3,740 6,447 2,786 3,981 6,716 5,047 6,755 6,638 12, 053 6,419 9,705 4,103 3,017 9,556 3,646 5,878 5,882 1,402 970 6,105 6,146 13, 681 9,270 1,216 8,185 5,( 6,037 5,337 3,216 10, 981 5, 152 7,466 5,143 6,386 6,145 5,366 2,817 15, 810 2,053 13, 957 4,351 5,004 4,920 8,105 3,374 2,606 10,629 4,773 8,453 3,099 3,266 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA. 105 AGRICULTURE, LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. 7/ o 3 16,862 11, 445 7,826 17, 247 19, 524 22, 146 . 38, 907 25,549 ]9,299 23,270 11,333 15, 414 13, 842 12, 090 4,694 17, 436 17, 828 42, 815 21, 075 14, 944 17,847 24,311 2-1,556 22,915 14,828 28,105 13, 760 38, 969 40, 574 18, 942 27, 249 15,335 25,883 36,278 22,070 29, 622 36, 279 16, 919 15, 197 15,761 21, 540 11,496 25, 846 Ifi, 232 40, 527 16,012 25, 193 $339,720 224,057 157,644 621, 075 269, 543 230,007 496,106 335,854 256,792 517, 201 212, 419 396,164 226,286 233,400 67,296 465, 294 386,207 678, 773 329, 321 227, 794 397, 837 263, 265 298, 227 311, 025 214, 721 501, 827 261, 811 493, 346 772, 989 348, 933 485, 158 348, 143 289,154 688, 879 289, 312 682, 590 660, 532 264, 143 248, 487 310, 665 275, 925 174, 530 ,520,577 199,804 490, 421 233, 426 346, 903 u 140, 215 36, 810 14, 891 56,435 23,907 8,406 8,740 625 35 76,180 38,188 124,268 28,178 20, 815 2,793 110, 237 91,702 226, 629 20, 946 18, 735 86, 317 228 4,540 3,558 7,217 225,207 104, 956 4,741 12,145 187,836 45,225 74, 060 9,671 183, 650 10,754 199, 473 36, 165 12,902 38,409 7,067 10,646 25, 061 135, 199 19, 179 5,967 1,422 11, 167 1,585 874 16, 986 416 16,119 2,275 5,891 1,540 1,340 18, 0i2 2,004 871 3,031 18,280 716 1,846 717 458 10,190 113 687 1,408 3,349 7, 745 860 2,008 3,967 6,852 11, 150 7,319 11, 851 637 1,435 322 8,635 2,520 914 2,010 4,246 32, 425 1,049 1,204 1,320 5,644 10, 104 2,604 2,568 265, 280 209,182 7-J, 995 303,921 122,080 259, 3as' 718,223 K9,073 90, 118 463,190 254,630 368, 207 2.59, 457 442, 242 52, 508 403,288 403,213 523, 570 343, 984 371,405 379, 983 135,7% 313,413 278, 539 425,502 457, 300 318,825 413, 083 725, 487 317, 890 416,538 343, 893 420, 693 549,777 ■ 317, 820 514, 419 797, 001 191, 248 229,001 326, 110 407, 526 496, 800 504, 517 203, 269 468, 583 239, 885 372, 174 58, 890 12,026 4D,641 41,463 59, 433 5,259 30,921 4.807 E05 52,097 14,698 33,498 13,380 5,983 120 110, 888 23,799 111, 611 24,180 9, 803 22,099 522 2,619 13,128 3,443 94, 818 63,767 3,629 66,287 60,934 32,351 17, 216 6,853 150, 174 6,020 159, 619 56, 619 8,650 30, 673 16, 077 11, 735 2,437 72,242 9,760 22,871 1,470 1,731 16,206 486 53,606 6, 775, 286 2,540 170, 595 32, 113 8,528 14,700 110, 204 6,090 512 263 700 6,592 1, 475 116 13 555, 245 11,807 1,115 2 13, 221 SO 471 .•J30 58 23,006 160, 365 935 34,655 4, 005, 558 9,308 139, 247 19, 109 24, 317 2,629 780 648 3,050 124,260 381, 437 608 636 551, 442 1, 732, 883 4,821 2,000 6, 025, .574 1,533 724, 348 845,200 1,509 15, 189 1,763 206 2,128 23,822 12, 270 130, 712 5,063 13, 070 o 410 9,378 609 6,672 13 1 4,731 7 35 4 37 173 800 782 476 83 817 87 200 458 43 1,171 19,1.38 1 2,673 893 133 128 4,589 100 10, 432 202 432 2,447 400 502 1,185 4, 283 11, 784 6,773 12, 518 10, 487 18,828 9,509 15,796 6,730 5,639 20*688 HV335 8, 133 9, 314 3,656 2,404 9,124 11, 289 23,638 15, 456 2,200 14, 881 9,748 10, 937 8,577 7,362 20,648 7,379 12, 963 9,453 9,804 8,442 10, 476 4,007 20, 496 3,327 21, 933 8.894 7,199 13, 846 14, 962 5,754 510 14, 073 8,148 10, 920 6,959 5,791 4,306 3,718 1,123 20,547 1,081 17,567 84,369 24, 477 12,023 4,924 9,419 6,668 4,383 13, 809 5,605 8,395 5,793 22,010 4,097 15, 461 5,232 16, 320 29, 549 36, 591 12, 232 9,802 8,569 63,418 92,758 2,375 32, 657 8,808 44,828 8,061 63, 084 8,969 43, 914 26, 605 1,047 1,545 28, 873 3,074 12, 676 2,736 77, 703 26,347 8, .336 11, 782 7,860 5,425 5,182 9,569 6,505 13,965 5,333 47 27,221 7,9S5 10, 416 9,522 9,665 619 10, 906 9,701 16, 474 17, 412 3,851 5, 24'4 4,444 9,575 6,465 14, 9.38 16,750 6,806 9,098 15, 280 11, 869 8,230 4,920 8,084 12, a35 7,753 23, 320 16, 012 3,892 11, 706 18,383 10, 073 10 10, 137 13, 865 4, 9-'7 3,915 0,620 28,158 17. 165 323 64, 417 99 162, 290 119,194 117, 585 131, 669 12, 407 13, 353 22, 111 • 31,091 10,125 52, 550 36, 066 27, 601 106, 925 34, 703 74, 241 64, 055 152, 347 144, 557 97, 229 64, 433 34, 242 13. 166 303, 006 200, 014 21, 001 107, 098 21, 304 161, 794 98, 058 76,458 51, 730 122, 425 106, 444 2,536 14, 135 118, 149 5,600 22, 528 11,214 22--', 210 73, 830 89,311 lOG STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA. AGRICULTUEE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. •3 1 ■s .a 1 1 .a ■s" CO t 1 1 § P. |l 1 -a a 1 H o 1 o t 1 ■3 1° g O m ■1 1 u o g g, 1 15 12 $24, 3S3 10,624 1,400 250 3,168 327 2,969 1,856 150 28, 074 4,197 5,259 14, 647 ;i56 $113 68,383 52, 827 42,075 51,529 79, 157 13, 786 27, 373 22,714 13, 272 127, 916 33, 640 88,611 45, 519 22,865 1,320 78, 263 82,769 122, 851 100, 200 9^179 101, 864 20, 125 21, 159 24,785 18,586 83,831 42,841 59, 510 31, 965 74, 681 69,270 85, 509 14,482 106,125 13, 388 145, 032 49, 813 28,267 64, 064 50, 698 11,282 617 1,100 900 2,173 473 3,256 1,304 4,780 31 8 o 1 4,738 45 1,731 4 25 160 125 46 5 4 478 105 237 158 5,787 60 117 24 434 95 F, 546 8,929 20 6,463 25 230 100 47 20 16 60 10 15 18 n Beaufort 7 4,226 553 533 3,152 744 5,743 1,015 453 417 412 1,871 1,155 1,414 1,360 764 17 359 2,623 H Bladen 1 5 q in 1,342 166 110 480 795 10 32 930 3, 167 999 405 1,067 33 588 10 13 214 10 45 8 30 11 Burke IV 107 23 1 4 VI Caldwell 14 15 660 6,425 15,022 13, 136 3,378 3,455 5,411 9,080 3,137 6,787 80 27, 181 9,466 2,311 11,534 34,446 9,911 5,616 3,907 1,27) 2,074 24, 790 16, 495 50 19, 777 7,509 10, 032 590 65 90 91 30 534 3 Ifi 5 22 759 4 . 119 337 2,250 246 5,103 277 1,554 80 321 145 563 2,320 15 285 258 5 35 23 372 2 71 14 14 17 4 63 2,609 331 2 2 17 IP 10 9 •^n Cho wau PI 729 50 no Columbus i>:i Craven 585 3,912 25 46 M Cumberland 50 15 20 154 8 20 95 Currituck "C, 335 8 570 232 286 1,495 32 196 66 1,747 7,476 3,740 2,860 5,408 5,489 9,604 1,136 2,801 1,428 3,314 8,072 6,254 898 1,257 832 2,499 30 276 12 284 14 69 "7 Davio 9R Duplin pq 1 ;«i Fortiyth Franklin 246 17 11 ni 60 1,151 aa Gaston 85 . 11 200 497 180 10 •■ .13 Gates S4 GranviUe 77 1,088 811 2,788 368 1 108 2,199 2i :ir> Greene :iii Guilford 149 64 9,187 2,579 117 2 22 65 37 Halifax 151 2 ria Ilarnutt 5 :w Haywood 2,472 623 330 857 100 657 4!) Henderson 6 41 Hertford 24 11 4-.! Hyde :.. 4:) Ii-edeli 161 14, 038 3,261 8, 915 30 645 21 129 84,177 44, 839 68, 883 18,980 16, 737 556 345 1,329 3,896 185 3,137 1,420 1 44 Jackson 355 25 22 K Johnson .17 02 695 40 Jones 72 1,295 47 Lenoir IS 10 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA. 107 AGRICULTURE PRODUCED. O ■i IS ■a HEMP. j •3 n o C3 O 1 1 a g 8 o M 1 o IS 1 ■s II si i t CO s ^ a s i t 1 a 1 no M aD g- 1 "^ 4h O f ■ a 1 1 SO 1 O i Manufactures, home- made, value of. OQ n 1 •a" o £ ® .a o 7,051 4,260 2,814 653 574 116 6 4,539 5,361 5 430 2,787 91 473 86 1,480 2,776 835 618 938 2,934 2,082 3,230 1,529 1,839 1,315 1,536 2,879 835 425 2,132 3,235 2,609 991 882 1,575 2,738 4,454 522 1,077 3,741 1,546 3,899 2,731 3,968 1,586 1,511 ^8 1,441 854 4,064 1,960 237 1,049 878 546 200 4,702 921 724 1,830 974 17,286 34, 510 10, 452 17, 008 16, 025 34,497 16,370. 36, 460 13, 474 22,973 18, 875 19,725 27,524 8,925 5,340 21,702 45,863 37,827 15, 594 3, 662 24,955 45, 510 62,422 6,511 8,600 46,743 16, 949 51,554 25, 012 47, 094 19, 046 20,519 5,219 18,242 10, 136 57, 132 14, 155 2,082 16,422 11,867 6,752 1,500 56,501 12, 160 13, 628 19, 155 9,720 $12, 685 26, 066 16; 269 21,479 38,461 15, 784 25,378 56, 028 8,799 51,004 12, 179 11, 898 21,999 6,010 1,735 17, 643 24,704 88,983 32, 907 6,044 26, 961 57, 032 17, 148 9,590 10,068 23, 190 14, 043 67, 019 80, 997 18, 192 23,855 12, 462 6,522 23,755 14, 400 25,306 23,339 16, 148 28,590 23, 157 20,932 $107,448 49, 333 32, 455 130, 986 60, 712 93, 399 187, 616 140, 924 76, 497 125,158 50, 961 110, 290 54, 073 65, 165 24,783 102,093 89,221 229, 403 81, 576 67, 220 94, 883 114,850 136, 091 155, 913 75,254 159,506 99, 116 222,545 324,358 115,800 195, 079 88, 911 121,435 207,001 149, 121 221, 770 215, 941 121, 024 55,247 79, 648 131,933 1 2 3 28 804 4 300 530 13,721 1,282 i,6a-i 20 879 14 42 2 15 12, 742 5 6 50 7 8 9 4,01D 2,317 15 4,944 17,272 300 1,747 1,890 1,437 2,781 1,251 91 169 362 3 477 735 32,668 2,396 10 11 3 1 1 311 12 8 4,844 13 14 15 210 387 315 133 103 34 2 26 5 9,747 688 24, 672 Ifi 17 626 340 55 18 19 20 7,703 21 22 450 7 80 65 86 34 23 24 777 46 9,660 5,110 922 131 30 5,586 40 72 1,090 1,855 897 597 124 2 25 1 10, 403 26 3,650 3 27 50 228 100 3,508 28 29 10 1,021 2 12 21 92 6 591 2 17 30 31 4, 253 32 77 2 258 13 91 3J 34 35 15 2,990 50 8,376 36 623 37 38 2,008 806 21 93 12 3 10 13,652 9,471 450 3a 40 • 41 42 3,239 362 625 373 11 32 8,318 9,808 1 29, 408 27, 188 28,736 6,889 10,707 135,501 46, 984 224, 711 84, 905 142, 429 43 44 4; 4( 80 40 4- 108 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. ACRHS OF LAND. LIVE STOCK. Lincoln Mueon Madisou Martin McDowell Mecklenburg .- Montgomery . . . Moore Nash New Hanover . Northampton. . Onslow Orange Pasquotank ... Perquiman.s - - . Person Pitt Polk Baudolph . Richmond Robeson Rockingham . . . Rowan Rutherford Sampson Stanly Stokes Surry Tyrrel Union Wake "Warren Washington . . . Watiiuga Wayne Wilkes Wilson Yadkin Yancoy 43, 567 33, 609 32, 592 56, 072 28, 878 95, 938 56, 178 65, 165 81, 045 63, 925 137, 775 63, 783 101, 354 53, 674 53, 183 101, 736 106, 164 20, 328 131, 486 82, 443 106, 139 111, 783 135, 103 58, 178 118, 636 58, 933 46,042 58,090 21, 370 66, 572 183, 947 132, 074 23,626 25,085 108, 883 73, 109 61, 366 46, 133 139, 350 303, 946 174,760 178, 507 115, 565 181, 562 204, 513 375, 148 204, 093 395, 624 170, 292 233, 680 246, 040 40, 258 67, 853 118, 663 233, 444 70, 966 288, 995 352,243 464, 904 190, 692 197, 715 149, 342 345, 597 172, 140 182, 478 254, 240 63, 633 236, 900 368, 019 225,183 74, 810 141, 743 190, 646 270, 009 115, 544 138, 519 265, 675 $1,380,259 894, 577 733, 397 1, 158, 545 774, 416 2, 823, 949 359, 341 3, 178, 311 1, 736, 608 1, 381, 687 2, 639, 031 1,337,923 2, 141, 690 1,927,149 1,537,770 1, 915, 505 3, 052, 010 435, 684 1, 791, 483 2, 117, 985 2, 355, 987 2, 638, 246 2, 924, 631 1, 100, 656 3, 110, 749 643, 061 983, 387 1, 212, 733 455, 845 1, 293, 504 3,216,866 3, 338, 899 704, 919 532, 532 3, 012, 511 1, 185, 765 1, 511, 672 1, 106, 415 944, 719 $35, 090 57, 897 26, 841 34, 485 31, 737 136, 957 49, 564 113, 608 73, 064 60, 559 8^ 905 43, 361 129, 292 45, 665 47, 594 57, 553 78, 757 20,011 152, 957 112, 738 98, 868 82, 752 148, 147 72, 968 65, 214 52, 045 43, 996 44, 457 21, 349 . 103, 786 151, 391 143, 563 25, 643 43, 798 68, 245 46, 669 24, 603 54,110 35, 188 1,531 1,863 1,031 1,156 894 2,839 1,354 2,190 1,166 1,151 1,882 1,008 3,199 1,106 1,091 2,034 2,092 651 3,877 1,494 2,271 1,859 3,193 1,772 2,193 1,774 1,378 1,540 428 2,163 4,137 3,964 621 833 3,135 2,362 1,195 1, 796 1,674 Total. 6, 517, 284 17, 245, 683 143, 301, 065 5, 875, 942 150, 661 690 495 335 551 648 1,618 290 465 485 439 1,935 403 552 554 661 306 1,013 164 323 819 904 674 1,010 710 539 198 409 243 196 700 1,363 916 215 154 673 328 473 511 297 1,806 1,899 2,090 1,838 1,345 4,319 2,259 3,587 2,213 3,431 2,250 2,619 4,081 1,464 1, 6.35 2,444 3,530 824 5,490 2,601 4,131 2,877 3,709 2,134 3,675 2,044 1,888 2,012 1,364 3,186 5,639 3,064 1,281 1,617 2,548 2,970 1,280 2,005 2, 993 51, 388 228,623 34 .466 384 488 180 50 228 196 1,145 929 1,368 603 375 667 568 393 1,081 404 588 332 720 500 16 463 1,071 63 466 831 420 323 1,597 1,616 246 436 855 1,073 612 341 401 48,511 2,875 4,138 2,997 4,585 3,051 6,314 4,752 6,474 3,536 8,174 4,848 6,103 6,622 3,425 4,155 3,897 7,773 1,306 7,533 6,472 8,696 3,641 5,993 3,766 6,272 3,663 3,261 3,323 3,163 6,544 9,541 5, 237 2,736 2,431 4,208 4,534 2,456 3,156 4,507 5,100 6,133 5,760 4,780 3,702 9,216 7,500 12, 866 5,439 5,758 4,813 3,936 11,314 1,515 2, 743 8,153 5,144 2,131 18, 137 4,418 10, 58) 6,283 7,B23 6, 483 9,107 5,958 4,604 7,321 2,699 11,641 10, 738 7,347 2,404 5, 941 3,874 7,874 2,727 5,003 6,133 416, 676 546, 749 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA. 109 AGRICULTURE. / / 1 ^' LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. 1 i- ■3 > 1 1 a a < HEMP. ■s 1 S •i s 1 1 OQ P s. 8° s 1 . 1 --1 II i n CM a ® a| t ^ i I S o s ■3 DQ 1 1 1 o a % a, 1 u - C O - 1, 45 478 2,712 4,739 10 2,594 42 73 112 2 242 7,509 13, 577 21,576 25 2,748 13,283 2,454 44 1,431 1,067 1,127 2,509 1,152 1,429 2,136 1, 343 1,253 3,468 919 4,404 2,165 659 1,195 1,582 440 1,023 6,060 786 1,206 4,946 2,272 1,368 2,258 2,769 ,4,289 5,654 2,286 925 1,642 1,485 1,543 1,383 988 6,530 597 4,744 2,047_ 25, 900 17, 324 20,047 16,376 10, 935 20,384 22, 885 14, 579 15, 671 27, 321 5,220 50, 984 16,934 6,748 14, 154 17, 069 3,884 19, 912 73,429 9,576 12, 902 61,508 30, 980 25,846 22,961 30, 177 44, 139 72,731 24,898 11, 257 31,563 11, 234 14,863 18, 573 13, 131 75,003 10,037 64,250 27, 908 13, 493 51, 870 27, 808 6,770 17, 897 10, 937 35,102 34, 135 19, 682 8,619 15, 993 24, 683 19, 367 5,544 7,744 18, 392 22,945 15, 561 47, 299 13, 187 38, 017 16, 262 10, 827 21,158 46, 265 19, 908 19, 577 24, 717 5,882 32, 404 38, 942 22,585 7,605 41,994 18,957 35,804 10, 174 28, 192 43, 316 73, 473 65, 782 SI, 637 100, 438 00,718 154, 100 71, 419 130, 098 153, 734 137, 033 186, 033 135,734 145,400 63, 693 110, 523 105,208 246, 952 41, 548 177, 105 148,415 193, 473 124, 401 143, 174 85, 100 263, 900 03, 056 8.3, 751 84,123 45, 653 100,283 291, 657 160, 194 61, 581 39, 058 253, 176 106, 902 119, 075 86, 421 71,900 1 225 'i' r^O 115 14 3 240 70 306 20 33 ■14 23 'it 2 •ili 17 30 5 61 60 •iR W 5 4,5D4 10, 210 6,120 1,816 415 70 5,170 500 10 2,945 110 68 373 2,882 335 78 3 58 fin fii 153 fiT 63 64 4 432 3,461 1,794 1,017 fi'l 4,516 66 30 07 5 436 2 85 OR 6 2,351 2,465 fii 66 2,109 70 10 71 7"> 215 748 7T 3,316 7,597 3,952 432 1,186 215 5 74 2,086 '75 625 7fi 1,448 77 1,845 100 1, .'590 21,460 46 17,982 50 6,292 6,361 63 12 85 516 1 3 331 Tri 79 130 RO 12,869 5,980 81 155 5,342 Ri 1,556 2 1,128 354 r:i 84 10 12 10 2,745 22,975 n 4,873 182 fin 3,016 216, 490 20,008 338 30,845 38 17, 759 12,494 263.475 170,495 2,055,969 2, 04.'), 372 10,414,546 112 STATE OF OHIO AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. ACRES OF LAND. § iM* f 0) a CO ■a > e. >. a f. ^ a LIVE STOCK. Adams Allen Ashlaud Ashtabula . . Athens Auglaize ... Belmont Brown Butler Carroll Champaign. Clark Clermont . . . Clinton Columbiana Coshocton . . Crawford . . . Cuyahoga . - Darke Defiance ... Delaware . . Erie Fairfield . . . Fayette Franklin ... Fulton Gallia. Geauga Greene Guernsey... Hamilton... Hancock ... Hardin Harrison ... Ilunry Highland ... ITocking Holmes Huron Jackson Jefferson . . . Knox Lake Lawrence . . Licking Logan Lorain 147, 943 00,221 163, 684 192,296 129, ."iSl 77,443 178, 859 165,632 207,985 162, 117 146,237 157, 534 170, 344 15.3, 111 192, 868 189, 801 142, 633 175, 655 147, 805 51,368 146, 971 106, 279 196, 702 169, 432 191, 914 71,289 107, 006 151, 545 147, 344 184, 422 164, 623 133, 740 69,188 157, 735 31, 424 200, 849 104, 479 153, 143 190, 672 102,988 141,481 199, 391 103, 117 63,522 281, 932 130, 286 179, 770 124, 298 104, 754 80,290 78,786 12:), 170 102,913 97, 783 109, 9M 100,048 72, 429 91,400 74, 052 102, 479 90,753 100, 203 123,283 87,224 64,440 135, 108 92, 348 97, 466 39, 172 95, 744 48, 292 95,500 73,104 116, 339 56,253 76, 360 20, 249 72,331 124, 772 82,622 73,611 59, 178 121,427 114, 905 ea.STB 83,158 91,425 79,814 109, 520 30,982 76, 830 43,623 301,932 81,697 $5, 257, .160 4, 769, 391 9,230,603 7, 560, 617 4, 980, 034 3, 738, 720 8, 870, 648 8, 6ae,635 19, 049, 044 5, 802, 027 9, 074, Oil 10,916,391 12, 365, 912 .10, 492, 577 9, 651, 073 8, 074, 539 7, 535, 419 11, 342, 819 7, 822, 455 2, 565, 397 7, 736, 033 5, 370, 397 10, 624, 964 8, 195, 860 13, 123, 092 3, 186, 131 3, 451, 711 5, 946, 630 11, 102, 030 6, 879, 974 83, 332, 210 7, 142, 981 3, 396, 493 6, 960, 795 1, -182, 582 10, 845, 787 3, 380, 386 7, 273, 377 9, 911, 867 3,114,917 7, 524, 073 10, 388, 122 5, 427, 070 2, 170, e~i 13,075,432 7, 296, 708 8, 0D8, 485 $146, 653 13g, 067 239,325 188,559 156, 046 15£i,6a6 214, 547 204,429 421, 370 184, 371 184, 460 277, 165 330, 272 298, 691 198,635 162,838 210, 982 274, 761 234, 578 68, 399 174, 313 207, 318 247, 580 136, 967 287, 879 111,345 125, 238 262,507 195,944 15.3, 352 388, 144. 183,050 79,470 133, 95S 62, 186 1P3, 789 99,541 826,777 292,083 63,447 164,088 817, 874 127, 414 68,800 335, 859 139, 998 299, 025 6,630 6,196 8,284 6,636 5, 731 5,681 9,487 8j_65,3 12,694 6,633 7,453 8,484 8,797 9,204 10, 033 7,998 8,133 7,480 8,154 3,159 7,181 4,640 10,063 7, .547 11, 393 3,549 4,667 4,8G1 8,101 8,706 10, 814 8,593 4,360 5,834 2,134 9,871 5,368 V,48S 9,917 », 055 3,847 6,407 3,878 2,409 13, 07.'> 7,609 8,089 127 110 27 17 33 95 49 228 209 4 144 254 348 244 123 2 .59 28 37 25 85 1 118 67 125 9 91 63 168 20 302 34 66 20 11 19S 34 58 91 84 11 31 5 126 73 U2 29 4,977 5,821 9,05? 16, 124 5,658 5,534 8,431 6,504 6,305 7,433 6,274 7,526 7,401 6,775 10, 503 7,537 8,243 16, 661 8,368 .3, 519 7,187 5,053 9,318 5,641 8,784 5,160 4,609 19, 585 6, .309 8,486 12,777 7,764 4, Ul 5,530 3, 164 7,392 5,404 6,428 9,745 4,463 6,0M 0,688 5,410 2,572 11,948 6,835 10, 592 1,266 746 222 1,442 1,558 374 1,065 718 210 383 270 202 303 2.36 643 486 493 1,220 457 681 502 609 349 710 484 3,194 1,207 581 244 3, 1117 280 654 476 430 699 334 715 325 1,141 1,560 274 203 469 1,368 491 443 1,311 5, 693 7,333 12, 410 14,722 11, 597 8,190 11,825 9,123 7,182 9,122 11, 808 10, 333 6,373 10, 212 9,943 15, 246 12, 430 10, 395 9,538 5,973 11, .')C9 6,124 13, 464 10, 727 12, 485 7,382 5,773 12, 713 9,263 11, 162 3, 472 12, 341 6,549 6,786 4,070 13, 843 6,886 10, S70 12, 248 6,820 8,530 13, 438 8, 095 4, 539 19,710 12, 200 6,329 STATE OF OHIO, 113 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. OS 21, 784 33, 217 23,768 6,449 21,447 27,341 25, 743 46, 695 51,640 14,585 22,851 29,622 38,151 51,549 18, 386 25,577 32, 429 9,901 39, 052 15,323 27, 7Si 9,544 38, 510 44, 970 49,589 14, 630 15,282 4,817 31, 655 22,611 39, 133 35, 948 21,822 11, 811 12,095 48,658 19, 600 23,364 18, 921 15,354 11,404 33, 810 4,099 13, 756 43,738 25, 456 12, 255 $747, 012 607, 157 1, 201, 395 1,178,702 748, 589 546,645 1, 072, 401 1, 090, 551 1, 333, 592 769, 269 979, 172 1, 149, 065 1, 097, 264 1, 182, 379 1, 094, 809 1, 005, 897 909,828 1, 178, 811 822,805 359, 807 905, 519 633,138 1, 225, 229 1, 190, 668 1, 442, 879 524, 452 546,341 1, 177, 207 989, 033 1, 024, 372 1, 343, 97B 910, 533 468, 206 884, 831 249,095 1, 164, 653 492, 442 822, 573 1,351,673 493, 285 829, 917 1,338,190 649, 659 337, 856 1, 820, 577 872,523 1, 390, 836 15 311, 490 158, 560 133, 175 36, 133 120, 082 107, 006 116, 036 382,_665 682,823 41,597 |7I, 074 J43.688 321, 911 233,609 19, 641 133, 270 92, 129 27,312 291, 563 119, 807 46, 678 J12, 278 531,994 98,589 169,007 132,097 281, 937 10, 949 _368, 737 74, 237 261,.980 ^306, 632 71,-919 30, 147 85,282 J392, 445 121, 111 114, 823 .232,139 161, 752 59, 913 65, 02L 5.3,844 140, 528 110, 065 214, 227 78,082 872 6,600 10, 478 5,271 721 10, 804 7,608 4,712 4,246 14,293 4, .549 11, 739 6,629 692 21,853 28, 252 6,748 14, 906 25,264 3,350 2,317 4,575 10, 774 10, 177 4,185 9,624 2,046 1,997 5, 145 11, 451 14, 855 7,298 4,853 19, 889 2,065 1,608 4,151 18, 301 1,703 921 8,800 ]9,655 11,183 670 13,949 4,419 2,616 ■B-H- 935, 567 663, 698 535, 966 279, 573 641, 605 480, 529 773, 525 1, 334, 148 2, 396, 323 260, 603 1,039,211 1, 093, 400 1, 318, 719 1, 817, 988 343,276 975, 605 699, 294 582, 100 853, 141 336, 246 967, 091 760, 025 1, 447, 146 1, 675, 820 2, 068, 861 360, 768 584, 401 152, 420 1,334,122 609, 952 1, 477, 197 1, 133, 511 442, 648 487, 598 305, 780 1, 446, 40O 523,484 434, 744 1, 068, 998 424, 502 356, 120 980, 795 431, 004 526, 170 1,771,459 809, 784 631, 744 96, 071 112, 012 347,383 177, 022 66, 104 117, 712 406, 514 141, 386 216, 064 269, 711 149, 998 160, 565 227,472 112, 480 319, 859 156, 766 316, 225 195, 462 172, 349 82, 527 154, 706 152, 720 195, 171 25, 021 183,841 64,991 63, 452 128, 689 132, 334 246, 889 185, 144 227, 737 74,640 2.30, 750 36, 995 79, 933 85, 779 249, 130 388, 090 61, 697 225, 868 235,546 96, 254 50, 460 295, 505 154,286 146, 773 43, 060 4,745 249, 447 275, 789 21, .338 2,275,731 1, 898, 846 833, 367 8,083 1,430 12, 555 630, 930 50 242 3,474 1,240 163, 985 78, 604 4,500 25 70, 941 715 3,410 12, 900 4,090 2,157 183, 640 900, 079 1,450 100 7,810 23, 000 9,917 6,550 106, 591 1,657 4,356 55 58,489 5,000 47, 593 10, 103 1,500 18, 174 £ DO o S 37, 454 49, 059 199, 403 148, 205 88, 958 34, 556 198, 895 44, 555 9,389 292, 602 105, 652 130, 305 24, 242 81, 972 337, 250 200, 173 153, 959 145, 169 35, 897 23,518 152, 132 132, 317 86, 684 78, 691 64,492 65, 841 39, 540 107, 105 65, 800 224,218 5,907 88, 441 32,776 435, 516 10, 502 50, 818 41, 184 141, 488 269, 573 31, 908 360, 711 275, 398 124, 685 14, 395 501, 928 85, 873 286, 265 341 110 562 4,160 2,428 395 711 1,722 733 2,283 493 572 1,523 1,738 811 793 2,921 472 353 597 1,486 659 245 1,089 582 5,527 1,934 367 1,075 6,268 54 152 758 621 361 664 1,168 1,277 1,585 207 1,545 168 2,026 1,493 45 2,995 1^ 30, 447 76, 446 107, 2.34 178, 223 57, 261 61, 171 93, 055 67, 570 85, 642 130, 431 41, 739 65, 041 242, 794 55, 128 145, 484 78, 782 133, 166 399, 352 65, 802 71, 998 76, 293 178, 443 85, 338 31, 715 205, 733 111, 581 43, 855 122, 282 77, 039 47, 536 340, 118 130, 426 47, 408 66, 382 60, 004 42,627 47, 681 82, 373 80, 919 31, 226 84, 262 97, 701 252, 856 32, 052 150, 823 47, 877 217, 541 M 5, 353 1,618 277 755 3,600 129 4,845 15, 278 12, 092 344 1,968 7,063 18, 562 7,476 550 672 339 2,371 5,315 590 379 1,115 8,115 2,076 5,600 253 4,787 38 4,948 673 20, 482 905 86 353 312 7,109 1,548 574 393 888 1,007 486 139 7,959 2,617 1,396 1,217 114 STATE OF OHIO. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. n I n 1^ CO a o3 > l^ n W Adams Allen Ashland Ashtabula • . . Athens Auglaize Belmont Brown Butler Carroll Champaign . . Clark Clermont Clinton Columbiana . Coshocton . . . Crawford Cuyahoga - . . Darke Defiance Delaware . . . Erie Fairfield Fayette Franklin Fulton Gallia Greene Guernsey . Hamilton.. Hancock . . Hardin Harrison .. Henry Highland . Hocking... Holmes — Huron Jackson . . . Jefferson . Knox 'Lake Lawrence - Licking . . . Logan Lorain 3,273 4,036 23, 247 5,717 476 32, 392 36, 196 16, 716 337, 064 7,044 8,062 13, 803 19, 613 5,828 7,254 8,099 13, 464 3,335 29, 143 2,596 3,581 16, 368 25, 679 356 7,850 7,322 461 3,910 25, 938 10,229 170, 904 7,012 2,479 9,153 384 1,234 1,418 20, 858 10, 090 121 49, 139 9,565 14, 759 11, 232 5,615 6, 815 I 1,044 19, 278 55, 058 31,137 14, 930 14, 985 39,245 2,261 6,452 136, 250 13, 805 8,642 6,764 6,775 144, 703 61, 472 45, 695 17, 075 23, 669 11, 595 45, 724 9,409 25,107 7,986 27, 134 16, 372 4,002 23, 717 7,796 49, 219 7,373 23, 037 17, 071 46, 940 5,400 2,960 14, 266 62, 815 13,423 3, 344 30, 579 66, 131 15, 980 672 70, 122 16, 808 16, 613 $20, 974 20, 175 25, 306 41, 594 , 17, 799 17, 849 37, 196 10, 367 15, 592 3,055 34, 908 25,620 27, 003 16, 695 9,479 16, 484 36, 444 67, 437 16, 928 8,163 6,765 52, 252 23, 578 10, 182 23, 761 19, 367 24, 737 24,254 16, 939 10, 556 26, 653 29, 079 7,115 13, 043 7,499 10, 453. 2,906 27, 090 30, 820 6,491 18, 366 17, 820 41, 810 43, 779 16, 941 29, 459 68, 184 3,201 3 150 173 161 351 90, 110 14, 202 147 60,032 323 61 673 61 636 45 6,610 345 65 191 6 42 353, 818 73 10 182 398 67 42 305 11 178 15 381 $360 95 45 125 4,543 916 23,411 14, 048 8,692 871 4,455 7,695 5,877 525 1,225 50 765 61, 692 858 918 242 12, 279 8,049 865 31, 855 217 1,650 1,258 4,380 861 459, 196 277 69 35 4,782 25 3,960 423 464 4,076 5,430 3,187 9, 605 5,354 4,484 50 2,251 385, 820 471,410 827, 720 896, 838 634, 873 441, 954 671, 376 510, 297 557, 344 612, 1.34 348, 013 473, 250 593, 708 565, 834 794, 349 518, 041 619, 497 1, 163, 665 442, 500 226, 345 522, 584 459, 586 668, 294 296, 871 653, 048 309, 448 309, 430 760, 781 434, 791 595, 122 691, 716 486, 654 217, 964 636, 211 134, 511 400, 682 286,230 584, 489 836, 964 331, 168 520, 576 721, 877 589, 795 183, 957 902, 805 472, 191 1, 243, 992 2,042 15, 573 83, 717 2, 375, 705 89, 213 3,680 15, 415 16,274 3,400 21, 366 71, 570 14, 934 868 12, 445 61, 881 16, 961 4,704 1, 433, 727 5,170 5,981 29,364 39, 145 12, 336 4,695 9,233 46, 105 25,712 4, 519, 998 5,369 20,826 2,475 34, 229 5,830 12, 358 8,746 8,055 11, 674 15, 341 42, 652 18, 695 10, 213 44, 037 257, 090 1,143 175, 344 2,346 1, 177, 293 7,220 10, 869 25, 947 38, 723 19, 278 10, 008 21, 421 8,334 7,377 16, 071 15, 314 15, 673 12, 226 10, 140 30,383 13,727 24,832 33, 379 11,106 9,954 18,054 15, 901 17, 265 4,807 15,502 20,280 9,149 37, 600 9,239 20, 962 19, 090 18, 917 8, 932 18, 496 5,160 10, 796 10, 056 21, 091 32, 620 9,732 16,224 20, 507 23,903 4,375 23,927 16, 325 32,030 1,040 2,901 10,822 4 104 672 2,192 52 34 2,715 1,499 1,441 62 26 5,501 815 12, 309 54 508 1,529 1,333 997 25,791 3 377 2,693 629 15 274 767 7,426 933 1,092 233 255 612 9,737 1,.328 180 1,919 3,678 75 14 754 2,081 379 659 552 517 508 1,098 303 791 581 546 614 603 1,167 1,081 889 262 781 1,976 74 457 307 651 258 1,139 612 670 201 350 299 520 2,079 86 1,014 159 1,145 123 994 769 631 306 630 806 1,022 392 78 754 748 780 90 2,770 G83 3SG 1,416 19 84 559 3,545 104 5 293 42 196 59 49 74 210 207 138 1,042 502 465 20 44 273 154 22 15 444 57 358 5,000 47 574 68 131 STATE OF OHIO. 115 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. o o 1 £ ■ -a 1 a B u < HEMP. 1 1 Pi ■s 1 ■a S 1 i ° i 5 a i i ■s Is si o t S °. o 'ft h s o o p< i Cm O 1 s m 1 1 = 1 a a o 25, 122 28,412 85,934 185, 025 22, 778 15, 321 3,601 12, 326 11, 478 577 40, 699 3,570 8,309 101,211 20,259 9,265 17,531 32, 210 21,807 14,830 76,465 2,412 31, 805 3,729 14, 270 7,608 7,324 246, 618 46, 912 1,213 1,748 55,372 45, 601 2,847 13,082 24,480 6,297 8,442 21,802 3,605 3,216 59,984 37,025 7,567 44,011 242,468 70,113 4,887 3,382 7,570 4,684 2,549 2,671 2,199 3, 9,50 3,328 787 4,658 2,497 8,277 11, 983 6,762 1,641 4,148 297 7,753 2,140 8,160 20, 085 6,297 571 1,261 38,335 486 10, 786 8,418 11, 696 803 5,376 7,243 17, 061 10, 967 168 6,732 2,115 1,397 13,286 6,766 4,412 4,375 29, 393 7,129 14, 117 8,114 13,824 81 4,523 11,454 2,349 17,546 4,920 5,734 7,060 19,577 28,649 11,651 5,872 12, 552 1,163 13,480 9,100 6,170 10,923 4,227 5,662 170 777 498 1,534 554 708 539 429 632 1,470 246 329 259 72 450 551 1,041 849 430 1,287 275 743 520 377 528 1,954 371 868 94 427 77 930 715 49 678 386 34 555 1,241 199 212 786 437 308 1,068 137 1,549 17, 652 24, 118 19,088 37,389 19, 540 16, 137 21, 520 17, 904 3,965 16,955 14,339 14,209 15,985 13, 190 19, 237 23,120 16, 739 13, 936 22, 085 16, 650 15, 936 14, 145 23,630 14,484 17,859 17,248 10, 453 17,993 7,163 23, 342 8,402 17, 586 16, 966 20,344 7,968 14, 922 2,776 14,436 18, 024 6,972 11, 496 23, 109 19,816 12, 834 33,911 18,555 29,530 $9, 476 13, 732 2,640 26,708 15, 978 7,060 4,396 14, 316 3,555 2,451 2,718 3,557 8,558 1,094 4,535 6,423 5,694 3, 065 7,153 5,206 20, 077 2,637 10,232 1,905 9,325 4,367 21,374 6,453 453 7,027 10, 593 6,866 3,434 1,371 2, §13 5,857 19,868 4,863 4,623 16, 140 23 5,435 2,470 11,464 9,198 1,650 2,752 $139, 153 119, 440 107, 223 115, 864 122, 375 116, 7W 188, 163 213, 916 . 318,274 149, 157 142, 136 192, 029 288, 462 282, 839 180, 555 153, 142 141, 548 201,993 192, 715 76,881 120,255 100, 341 208, 838 111, 169 218, 475 96, 788 120, 578 89, 322 221, 439 160, 655 387, 823 143, 975 73, 679 100,824 56,419 165, 986 101, 548 128, 907 156, 379 94, 568 93, 580 148, 645 81, 374 87, 807 230,089 129,955 197,086 1 15 347 885 7,081 2,774 559 255 170 6,472 4,433 495 118 6,746 93 22 1,430 333 3,248 8,443 48 295 2,623 20 594 93 7 ? 15 4 59 20 36 142 f f 243 18 211 c 1 140 25 2,293 238 3,000 103 K 1 3 V. V u 3,180 777 1,541 4 i; i( 7 1- if 82 3,412 010 4,491 24,811 18 11,271 416 IS 2( 2] CK 629 123 6,652 1,51S 4,204 554 2,147 3,980 5,452 487 4,267 5,495 2,935 1,884 1,221 3,525 1,788 1,043 1,058 432 2,912 3,346 383 763 5,809 7,335 2,005 2: 2' 320 390 1,829 195 80 5,284 78 107 533 244 8,323 189 2. 28 3 3 2( 2' 2! 2 1 3 3 735 89 1,933 257 40 1,929 1,758 263 1,857 64 1,194 500 3,070 1,849 760 639 2,352 83 413 3 37 112 3 3 5 3 3 280 213 167 412 4 3,439 72 92 563 6,547 23 3 16 90 6 3 3 4 5 4 4 50 4 20 4 6 4 i A 116 STATE OF OHIO. AGRICULTURE, COUNTIES. Lucas . .' Madlsou Mahoning Marion Medina Meigs Mercer Miami Monroe Montgomery. Morgan Morrow , Muskingum ., Noble Ottawa Paulding Perry Pickaway — Pike Portage Preble Putnam Kichlaud Ross , Sandusky — Scioto Seneca Shelby , Stark Summit Trumbull Tuscarawas - . Union Van Wert . . . Vinton Warren Washington . Wayne Williams Wood Wyandott — Total. ACRES OF LAND. 54, 727 183, 624 165. 984 136, 153 179, 381 81, 856 77, 600 148. 985 142, 406 185, 731 138, 306 149, 404 232, 548 141, 558 33, 545 14, 074 153, 486 170, 442 90, 364 230, 761 145, 818 64,531 197, 029 238, 895 79, 164 81,288 182, 316 93, 484 224,869 174, 073 231, 506 206, 863 125, 275 48, 541 76, 379 214, 103 62, 157 262, 969 78, 001 84, 887 112, 190 12, 62,5, 394 55, 405 71, 363 69, 838 85, 503 73, 701 83, 796 102, 624 83,602 124, 880 89, 211 103, 769 92, 594 131, 475 101,918 36, .358 28, 591 91, 633 61, 595 112, 772 75, 882 115, 098 109, 899 104, 304 149, 928 51, 671 76, 744 118, 491 103, 698 102, 313 60, 134 104, 325 102,834 87,527 77,403 113, 782 99, 464 175, 756 84, 697 81, 870 114, 212 90, 475 7, 846, 747 $3, 160, 115 7, 785, 708 ■ 9, 194, 650 6, 128, 526 8, 644, .509 3, 613, 309 3, 263, 331 11, 246, 996 5, 062, 236 38, 264, 634 5, 785, 357 7, 505, 514 10, 310, 607 5, 4.34, 051 2, 022, 570 540, 726 5, 960, 2S1 9, 977, 415 3, 831, 994 10, 924, 625 11, 102, 552 3, 216, 618 11, 805, 541 11, 981, 045 3, 925, 728 3, 347, 888 10,371,100 4, 699, 322 14, 081, 452 9, 579, 953 9, 890, 406 7, 743, 502 4, 718, 795 2, 090, 190 2, 580, 130 14, 024, 948 6, 755, 650 16, 159, 536 6, 858, 880 4, 187, 710 5,519,238 678, 132, 991 §-d a a $95, 125 120, 040 177, 987 167, 489 280, 435 105, 064 202, 431 345, 527 128, 536 427, 963 161, 758 182, 880 218, 282 151,665 80, 109 .( 17,005 129, 182 212, 136 105, 396 239, 680 256, 789 91, 974 339, 801 246, 085 142, 739 142, 777 298, 085 137, 926 371, 717 327, 453 242, 827 233, 573 122, 851 66, 142 80, 412 307, 692 221, 639 417, 060 90, 063 164, 765 159, 458 17, 538, 832 LIVE STOCK. 3,079 7,651 7,441 6,572 8,027 3,309 5,057 8,435 6,811 9,937 7,190 7,935 9,461 7,103 2,159 916 7,452 8,889 4^301. 7,893 8,559 3,649 10, 912 9,779 4,822 3,322 11, 191 5,216 30,413 6,078 8,567 9,455 7,030 3,039 3,346 9,098 7,355 14, 303 3,479 5,119 5,408 625, 346 76 90 54 47 20 46 284 41 109 72 40' 26 19 5 3 34 61 166 101 62 15 46 151 12 120 24 43 60 47 75 23 175 28 139 105 110 141 82 67 160 7,194 3,925 4,437 10, 396 5,745 12, 908 3,573 4,865 7,227 7,799 9,388 6,625 8,548 9,707 6,833 2, 004 1,303 7,613 6,718 3,496 10, 449 6,627 4,362 11, 290 7,462 4,575 3,100 10, 363 5,026 12, 762 14, 234 23,179 10, 416 5,934 3,492 3,576 7,447 8,529 16, 180 4,751 6,175 4,794 676, 585 730 640 542 36S 279 1,502 607 139 2,185 96 1,177 566 791 1,260 419 450 513 766 966 849 80 728 335 1,124 310 1,249 567 351 279 496 838 516 688 713 1,318 186 2,972 803 1,183 1,299 724 63, 078 5,141 15, 182 33,747 11, 704 15, 117 4,875 6,616 8,322 8,613 8,402 9,697 11, 363 17,222 10, 917 3,725 1,622 12, 817 14, 952 5,814 16, 892 7,717 6,239 13, 908 14, 003 8,373 5,678 15, 032 6,024 14,925 11, 341 19, 582 17, 409 9,420 6,303 5,978 8,157 13, 446 21, 287 7,163 9,802 13, 264 895, 077 8,694 58,092 83,371 48,284 93, 613 12,124 10,860 14, 514 19,273 8,0 29,904 59, 048 86, 356 29, 684 17, 697 1,123 47, 662 14, 156 11,774 79,220 7,909 0,367 61, 512 14, 941 22, 274 7,640 71, 697 13,417 68,183 63,717 66,555 86,262 30,362 6,366 14, 177 14,266 31,301 69, 470 16, 934 16, 661 60, 537 3,546,767 STATE OF OHIO. 117 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. ^ K "2 § "H 8,326 28, 816 11,079 28,105 15,249 10, 487 34,747 27,232 15, 910 35,500 20, 331 26,768 39,204 19, 872 9,484 6,958 23,367 75, 489 24, 594 9,223 46, 265 25, 779 34, 37U 60, 647 15, 578 17, 145 37, 496 24, 411 26,411 14,915 8,897 27, 012 21, 825 22,563 12, 484 46, 601 23,465 54, 243 19,203 20, .342 20, 179 2, 251, 653 $369, 781 1, 151, 309 1, 177, 972 869, 106 1, 375, 830 417, 150 501, 741 997, 476 743, 817 1, 129, 486 840, 663 1, 046, 002 1, 139, 424 759, 244 249, 005 100, 447 795, 856 1, 282, 408 643, 835 1, 683, 069 990, 183 442, 294 1, 383, 254 1,398,127 432, 825 413, 596 1,210,200 490, 851 1, 306, 905 1, 132, 323 1, 5A 020 1, 064, 079 804, 639 296, 000 454, 376 1, 224, 740 904, 828 1, 605, 946 483, 657 625, 178 719, 362 80, 384, 819 96,502 50,688 5,402 67,002 68,673 188,201 186,034 _43j6,039 154, 701 571, «9 96,543 53,264 258, 149 88, 133 78,343 27, 416 113, 396 242, 290 139,047 11, 819 __4p2,a57 139, 720 156, 341 382, 748 J51, 927 155,423 521,713 144, 824 46,554 86,a3l 1,,485 142, 758 61,556 103, 564 70, 190 412,,909 168, 860 241, 823 144, 446 169, 275 112, 148 15, 119, 047 4,378 8,804 2,017 3,295 6,832 5,567 23,124 25,496 3,064 24,042 875 2,739 13, 612 1,153 532 1,549 3,993 6,309 961 3,676 5,813 5,317 19, 051 9,356 3,830 27 9,110 11, 959 2,041 6,181 583 18, 726 2,895 4,341 658 2,627 3,858 20, 555 12, 942 6,627 6,357 384,389 1, 312, 433 289, 691 1, 143, 465 414, .522 335 032 494, 958 1, 307, 622 535, 779 1, 647, 103 684, 367 650, 052 1, 004, 116 706, 423 215, 364 138, 576 503, 828 2, 705, 098 962, 244 423, 754 1, 163, 976 025, 740 743, 757 2, 987, 892 478, 930 995,504 893, 231 500, 597 480, 009 521, 953 383, 972 663, 504 923, 085 296, 191 369, 770 1, 709, 239 750, 968 910, 105 408, 961 687, 840 616, 079 683, 686 73, 543, 190 49, 446 39, 603 326, 640 142, 992 306, 114 49,109 83, 680 242, 179 232, 956 341, 001 206, 719 247, 404 214, 018 165, 306 36, 098 7,544 118, 463 57, 018 64, 204 237, 053 243, 096 63, 718 466, 679 70, 569 139, 955 47, 979 392, 860 167, 580 437, 119 254, 010 266, 331 372, 160 65, 180 33, 350 45, 726 188, 536 88, 139 592, 693 92, 724 92, 638 103, 572 930 75 2,347 31,776 18, 191 19,003 75, 635 4, 368, 051 5, 658, 550 1,296,311 8, 730 3, 386, 874 200 620 104, 178 412 3,515 14, 310 270, 029 3,500 2,435 16, 917 191 4,357 102, 645 612 272 925 32, 448 905 7,130 349, 160 1, 39g, 217 3,900 12, 603 15, 409, 234 25, 092, 581 23,732 212, 740 270, 641 129, 803 336, 753 28, 977 26, 793 47, 005 47,543 23,395 96, 684 174, 643 252, 005 87, 046 55, 893 3,079 141, 611 41,417 29, 175 272, 302 27, 968 28, 086 183, 163 43, 527 65, 162 17,272 316, 538 41, 348 307, 718 184, 246 216, 690 227,214 99, 940 17, 730 34, 053 36, 958 76, 444 217, 484 55, 343 55, 145 138, 052 10, 608i 927 653 194 478 306 3,600 1,563 254 598 1,593 408 990 1,856 950 1,504 868 178 532 507 147 5,288 131 8 954 1,283 46 519 608 101 1,669 2,121 896 865 717 17 1,357 997 7,295 884 668 783 43 102, 511 150, 883 36, 382 139, 893 56, 187 165, 985 61, 587 70, 289 64, 942 63, 100 111, 753 43, 560 86, 773 110, 361 37, 315 44, 255 18, 055 55, 772 63, 380 46, 339 173,252 43, 779 63, 685 152, 564 65, 617 143, 377 44, 935 163, 167 48, 602 167, 108 133, 792 179, 942 108, 850 52, 521 40, 856 35, 072 79, 844 136, 057 186, 285 90, 948 106, 970 71, 199 8, 695, 101 6 370 32 214 512 4,862 672 7,939 983 22,366 8,535 219 8,268 930 235 223 2,778- 4, 073 2,075 196 12, 484 393 433 5,254 260 3,777 1,724 726 1,433 479 922 1,022 303 834 2,219 33, 267 5,983 1,956 699 304, 445 118 STATE OF OHIO AGRICULTURE. 48 49 50 51 53 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 COUNTIES. Lucas Madison Mahoning Marion Medina MeigB Mercer Miami Monroe Montgomery.. Morgan Morrow , Muskingum ■ . Noble Ottawa , Paulding Perry , Picltaway . . . Pilie Portage Preble Putnam Ricliland Robs Sandusky . . - Scioto Seneca Shelby Stark Summit Trumbull. .. Tuscarawas . Union ViinWert... Vinton Warren Washington . Wayne Williams Wood Wyandott - . . PRODUCED. « I Total. 6,882 190 8,638 1,690 11,240 309 22,347 55, 262 2,732 90, 895 9,095 5,784 8,996 1,882 678 428 5,936 577 53 16,694 41, 898 2,022 39,631 2,402 3,507 1,329 15, 570 19, 615 56,124 25, 982 2,201 13, 142 1,356 5,226 105 132, 626 1,012 40, 638 3,401 3,589 2,355 1, 663, 868 s ,■3 13, 020 11, 665 68, 584 21, 819 32, 492 6,555 14, 622 11,254 22, 999 6,725 22,741 43, 574 34, 471 16, 581 5,261 3,512 20,840 9,103 4,549 45, 926 6,663 7,533 75, 160 3, 574 9,117 2,074 18,729 14, 020 113, 978 42,841 50, 148 78, 173 31, 045 11, 925 6,807 7,921 24,504 97, 710 13, 874 29, 720 20, 007 2, 370, 650 $21, 047 27, 614 58, 902 13, 593 9,680 30, 068 23,944 30, 344 15, 692 35, 877 24, 139 16, 636 9,618 1,720 3,553 12, 725 22, 368 28, 004 21,281 12, 024 48, 566 9,730 58, 132 7,285 64,611 16, 306 14, 072 27, 986 4,492 17, 730 10, 617 4,578 5,102 29, 084 32, 107 32, 702 12, 305 22,621 10, 851 1, 929, 309 229 126 50 36 1,566 24, 005 283 684 56 474 5 60 111 .365 64 5 24 71 583 3,685 932 25 371 15 37 23 3 3,541 855 170 58 76 568, 617 s $24, 926 1,000 1,440 1,584 7,756 1,138 65 9,576 215 50, 758 4,782 91 24, 008 81 2,098 78 26 5,121 4,827 1,592 250 43 675 1], 628 809 11, 424 1,373 4,400 2,672 1,317 317 2,647 572 355 4,248 6,568 6,428 4,213 214 3,603 105 907, 513 301, 956 109, 835 775, 722 439,519 977, 373 257, 431 386, 955 647,191 461, 538 664, 747 766, 520 672, 106 694, 992 475, 353 164,378 50, 012 463, 020 465, 230 193, 535 1, 437, 556 609, 931 436, 961 921, 907 459, 606 245, 368 162, 633 600, 461 307, 786 1, 091, 923 874, 729 996, 584 976, 235 484, 896 185, 037 217, 604 469, 833 683, 915 1,169,581 406, 827 410, 189 373, 603 18, 770 140, 030 129, 610 6,454 567, 689 41. 159 9,555 13, 590 17, 673 1,747 35,523 47, 460 11, 487 56, 400 2,792 2,336 10,248 2,323 4, 064, 351 2,717 2,618 10, 377 15, 472 8, 710 490 37, 787 8,348 29, 589 2,278 5,201,951 25,180 111, 070 10, 805 13, 975 7,252 95, 205 47, 472 6,019 7,241 2,310 a 48, 543, 162 21, 618, 893 17, 127 8,316 37, 884 17, 271 29,567 13, 814 10, 146 11, 124 10, 370 14, 987 18, 433 25, 472 22, 096 15, 102 7,633 2,815 14, 141 7,703 4,878 38,861 8,430 9,183 32,934 7,945 15, 029 6,334 31, 583 7,627 49, 145 30,244 54, 276 26,686 14, 452 6,689 8,761 9,623 19, 162 49, 651 13, 972 17, 166 16, 049 1, 564, 503 175 5 6,423 4,502 11, 107 47 295 1,174 555 1,440 1,299 6,658 1,301 297 124 47 992 537 24 2,735 1,042 1,675 18, 298 93 5,562 62 12,233 203 16, 214 7,401 425 6,077 466 505 52 108 592 18, 295 2,570 1,531 2,494 16 171 127 711 436 295 267 534 768 512 944 1,119 1,590 862 255 124 1,166 971 58 120 831 303 520 1,230 157 17 2,013 275 679 122 125 875 493 221 677 1,048 607 1,796 239 380 448 STATE OF OHIO. 119 AGRICULTURE. , PRODUCED. a '3 > t a 'a < BEMP. 1 O 00 1 •s •1 m O i ° 1 a o ft fco o s o & 6 t a o s ° s 1 h EC 1 1 1 m § O ft >^ § ■ a h s > i a m 1 S i . 2 ° 1 II If 290 2,185 39,763 28,174 139,720 7,922 9,603 33,360 7,252 54,721 2,793 58,336 473 3,542 3,140 6,126 23, 402 10, 712 12,310 250,808 39,041 16,091 61, 562 25,724 1,150 1,115 38 1,453 3,923 11,563 36,645 19,542 . 23,646 13, 557 32,740 7,680 13, 118 20,988 7 790 19, 674 7,044 14,488 53 8,572 2,078 4,124 19, 597 322 2,554 12,364 3,507 3,083 1,693 1,614 11, 703 3,000 3,323 3,544 5,807 16, 636 8,323 4,751 7,394 2,069 631 545 247 1,207 1,105 123 737 1,389 478 412 464 830 161 383 406 1,107 250 269 368 708 208 984 425 270 169 120 1,138 590 560 853 591 836 306 810 182 317 498 1, 302 860 2,100 504 10,697 18, 609 9,265 22,453 19,245 8,846 22,701 12, 834 14,603 9,559 20, 879 23,032 19, 830 17,296 6,352 5,551 13, 016 15,834 10,738 21,429 11,251 18,537 15,472 25, 603 1,309 7,691 14, 914 10,506 19, 974 23,676 24,948 29,984 18,326 20,737 12,784 10,079 14,347 42,448 11, 450 19,555 9,793 $166 480 200 5,985 6,850 10, 681 6,682 3,136 16,275 3,196 4,919 2,804 8,631 11,485 225 920 16, 389 5,601 11,875 9,147 3,961 4,599 6,454 10,255 $77,309 92,791 141, 172 110, 552 152, 372 79, 043 130, 707 207,008 126, 102 49,957 -112,419 128, 801 268, 629 104,670 66, 722 23,974 122, 933 227,261 139,076 150, 446 354, 320 103, 223 297, 990 252,004 121,507 88,204 211,883 106, 878 1,523,568 159, 357 158,287 192, 954 97, 955 66, 198 75, 883 333, 466 184,233 272,986 89, 437 136,308 112,377 48 410 12,585 1,055 1,881 28 13, 990 12, 668 111 12,558 434 10,701 17 572 185 7,000 2,682 4,941 817 627 12,748 867 22,078 1,017 5,532 481 1,395 986 1,103 6,089 2,366 1,220 ] 0,133 16, 098 1,840 9,487 10, 148 9 2,368 2,858 3,109 3,882 1,192 9,357 1,519 13, 096 1,187 19,051 12,984 1,782 6,786 3,757 38 2,282 49 11,608 330 3,615 520 2,872 1,018 2,413 349 106 261 1,418 610 50 51 52 40 12 53 6 314 54 55 50 50 30 275 50 360 37 .58 59 6 60 2 9 61 62 12 4,166 50 1,005 170,219 465,940 39 590 2 45 7,702 25,081 2 3,411 12 63 27 C 6: 6C 120 6- 6i 6S 872 390 7( 7 7! 410 378 717 23,288 100, 400 12,800 5,131 525 205 1,787 7,050 1,676 2,082 841 618 1 159 11,576 6,052 1,335 9,808 975 1,385 2,720 72 2,492 158 5,267 66 51 2,615 24,346 14, 149 28,730 44,247 127,400 7,617 157, 761 18,073 21, 585 79,409 5,831 149,438 49, 181 17, 906 13,889 4,969 12, 643 3,991 2,281 1,312 2,035 9,760 9,317 5,791 14,234 3,410 13,153 8,978 1, 784 2,890 7,950 7; 1 6 58 7 7 7 T 5 7 3,800 7 8 19 8 76 ,8 8 3 160 353 234 600 33 8 8 8 8 8 15 928 882,423 242,420 7,394 3,345,508 370,512 5, 779, 076 53,786 1,459,601 596, 197 14, 725, 945 269 120 STATE OF OR.EGON. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. ACRES OF LAND. i 1 > 1 as n •a ° 2 ft >. ■S ^ 1 LIVE STOCK. CM .9 ■a g 2 1 Cm .a > I a ■a 1 a 31 1 1 g o t 1 a O o< 1 107, 341 52, 034 $1,268,818 884, 095 3,188 79 3,138 233 6,005 6,588 2 3 15, 051 8,989 6,556 421 26, 743 32, 527 13, 454 108, 508 200, 980 96,568 5,887 102, 113 773 33,966 6,057 38, 133 93, 347 k 115, 901 14, 569 21, 289 5,764 106, 560 18, 334 15, 077 52, 803 134, 461 164,367 52, 649 133, 257 6,537 50, 092 28,381 105, 294 96,756 817, 090 81, 400 142, 353 29, 800 820, 993 575, 950 173, 180 991, 640 3, 668, 033 1, 902, 426 7G6, 440 I, G30, 014 21, 418 379, 745 283, 700 1, 172, 493 1, 275, 101 42, 190 3,780 5,213 1,810 53, 937 43, 300 15, 955 63, 294 177, 042 148, 109 38, 338 87, 024 996 33, 483 20, 410 69, 629 75, 710 1,630 126 220 91 3,337 1,571 512 3,501 6,045 4,353 6.-)9 4, 655 44 1,636 1,255 a, 825 3,124 18 2,124 468 743 746 3,955 3,388 1,137 4,116 8,975 5,013 1,430 5,183 304 3,158 3,661 2,194 4,547 778 90 200 83 838 407 239 397 675 576 381 341 58 513 695 498 478 3,183 1,162 1,270 1,191 11, 606 8,684 2,912 6,271 10, 471 6,858 2,087 11, 825 219 4,503 6,010 2,770 C,456 4,338 934 743 4 5 8 13 73 123 57 73 74 4tf 10 105 6 7 5,853 1,589 308 . 7, 381 12,075 18,157 1,073 8,141 8 Jackson 9 in 11 1'^ 13 14 Polk 15 Ifi 78 96 57 69 6,748 781 3,298 8,045 17 IR 19 Yam Hill Total 896, 414 1, 164, 125 15, 200, 593 952, 313 36, 772 980 53, 170 7,469 93, 493 86,053 AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. 1 1 6^ •i ■s 1 = w H t 1 S P. -^ o g g o ■a a § P4 a o tn a a i .d o 1 or 1 1 1 1 S 1 Pi of P< 1 1 Benton 265 139 $39, 134 406 $10, 610 108,445 9,067 1,110 511 70 n 989 589 30 130 89, 196 1,940 4,647 595 5 300 49,380 11, 935 14,821 850 50, 102 48,360 11, 605 83, 585 275, 143 81, 672 11, 639 86,463 1,300 36, 740 19, 320 44, 488 64,390 5,265 4,200 500 2,048 874 1,056 100 10 ^ Clatsop li ■ Columbia 30 310 6 Curry 7 1,855 7,309 1,475 1,364 1,809 301 55 20 3,978 1,025 130 10, 480 64, 455 131, 843 19, 150 34,713 50 4,707 100 22, 855 60, 076 19, 835 4,250 4,400 1,655 3,040 964 4,265 3,275 4,113 8,720 3,460 6,875 10, 044 24, 867 500 3,322 1,293 1,707 497 1,282 2,040 4,950 2,220 1,919 56 1,365 976 2,632 1,961 4 91 178 311 82 10 963 357 514 3 R 3 q 10 7 31 622 U Jjinn 93 538 C54 333 62 176 200 n 14 Polk 475 150 3,064 6,831 1,083 355 83 55 383 80 534 131 15 Tillamook 16 Umpqua 1,746 18,435 V 1,687 1,043 7,240 220 8,872 8,114 331 330 183 269 2 17 Wasco 10 790 137 18 10 1 12 30 in YamHill Total 36, 354 3,749 478, 479 3,603 75,605' 1,000,157 105, 379 27,986 1,433 3,883 493 *No returns. STATE OF OREGON 121 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. P o 1 ■ 4 « CO 1 1 .3 1 a .2 o 1 1 o o a g Pi s 5 Cb4 O g p. o" 1 P ® ■H .a « o O ■a a g. o i f » i cd % " .- ■s s 1 m % ^ I" CJ & 6,328 $562,099 55,125 5,204 66, 996 \ 18, 533 1,643 14, 882 1 1 2 321 253, 464 47, 470 73,408 49, 520^ 488, 615 374, 480 115, 435 460, 879 1, 007, 345 569, 047 150, 752 673, 372 10,988 357,606 275, 015 39, 954 436, 806 28,301 20 1,622 260 80 6 1,711 31,717 1,755 1,792 830 82,253 32, 696 13,902 52, 824 146, 085 114,377 5,032 89, 569 805 58,911 79,820 47,390 58,Sl9 1 10, 113 838 585 2,164 33, 985 9,890 9,744 1,875 14, £74 6,588 7,167 14, 306 27,063 42, 642 34,544 17, 082 4,585 11,828 17, 880 18, 064 16, 320 3 109 4 703 464 25 11, 673 5,055 3,931 4,958 20,027 4,722 ~- 1,205 3,038 GOO 220 3,378 561 221 15, 262 4,421 1,789 846 283 16 965 591 593 852 •i r 16, 39S 4,038 62, 987 53,206 3, 649 52, 864 145,273 146, 931 2,166 73, 796 195 33,250 4,540 64, 627 98, 164 379 169 8 71 265 615 .150 60 305 16,301 2,148 7 R 1 q 7,120 10 364 75 19, 720 32, 153 33, 130 832 21, 081 10 11 (5,797 1,284 9,612 133 ■ 1 1" 25 n 14 1 Ti 225 225 176 15 3,053 6,753 2,152 2, 1-49 1 27, 441 ir \ 17 1 9,071 26, 466 335 18 5 185 ' 19 81 615 6, 946, 255 826, 776 2,704 76, 122 885, 673 405 219, 012 34,407 303, 319 335 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. O ■1 t^ '0~ 1 1 ■pi S a c S ■a S ^ 1° 1 a t3" o o 1 85 $1,283 $36, 439 1 1 2 i 70 65 140 150 34, 607 5,330 7,385 7,110 33, 571 90, 539 25,903 49, 012 84, 436 95, 191 4,339 39, 730 617 35, 830 10, 380 43,789 42, 255 3 1 4 5 5 6 155 400 7 300 8 9 50 2 17 2,879 35, 393 3,097 10 15 11 112 2 174 249 10 70 12 13 1 174 14 13 1,039 10 17 1 125 1,708 18 19 1 162 6 315 179 821 46,278 C48, 465 1 1 — . 16 122 STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. ACRES OP LAND. a a ° 3 a > .2 - B 3 LIVE STOCK. Adams Allegheny Armstrong Beaver Bedford Berks Blair Bradford Bucks Butler Cambria Carbon Centre Chester Clarion ClearBeld Clinton Columbia Crawford Cumberland Dauphin Delaware Elk Erie rayette Forest '.... Franklin Fulton G-reen Huntingdon Indiana JeflFerflon Juniata Lancaster Lawrence Lebanon Lehigh Luzerne Lycoming McKean Mercer Mifflin Monroe Montgomery Montour Northampton Northumberland . Perry Philadelphia Pike Potter Schuylkill Snyder Somerset Sullivan Susquehanna Tioga Union Venango Warren Washington Wayne Westmoreland... Wyoming York 192, 996 278, 583 189, 730 159, 731 177, 917 354, 672 88, 379 314, 620 281, G40 250, 698 73, 311 21, 653 117, 354 353, 434 148, 051 91, 209 53, 363 126, 350 273, 731 208, 035 170, 725 92, 089 15, 705 252, 830 196, 394 2,936 261, 390 73, 999 201, 413 168,663 223,544 85, 747 76, 667 445, 838 127, 136 126, 869 158, 940 191, 754 140, 088 30, 332 219, 811 94, 881 65, 068 255, 631 47, 919 159, 129 158, 865 128, 499 56, 937 26, 488 46, 809 114,403 83, 790 302, 670 27,128 165, 535 158, 913 73, 501 145, 759 ■67, 584 371, 839 123, 293 348, 457 73, 092 349, 810 63, 678 134, 107 138, 682 88, 392 194, 030 85, 362 51, 885 333, 073 49, 780 176, 875 112, 506 35, 502 63, 055 89, 609 137, 700 163, 028 67, 460 72, 611 206, 199 66, 934 52, 852 13, 505 34,623 141, 081 117, 638 30, 312 139, 925 86, 227 134, 256 137, 087 194, 146 124, 663 65, 573 93,673 57, 323 41, 673 38, 515 161, 497 113, 809 70, 838 123, 843 61, 933 60, 713 28, 221 18, 979 29, 691 41, 250 107, 421 3,493 93, 975 84, 489 117, 811 43, 443 2.-ia, 468 54,432 110, 328 145, 678 24, 775 192, 341 116, 396 143, 487 374,129 184, 036 70, 121 127, 848 $9, 339, 119 25, 394, 395 6, 253, 459 7, 858, 586 6, 324, 760 26,516,391 4, 995, 315 13, 459, 235 38, 766, 28(5 9^ 604, 550 2, 827, 438 929, 170 7, 073, 465 37, 343, 640 5, 205, 455 3, 578, 785 3, 343, 303 5, 085, 413 11, 736, 962 15, 645, 317 13, 000, 746 14, 795, 310 676, 750 14, 114, 964 9, 794, 617 343, 912 16, 265, 894 1, 725, 609 7, 442, 626 6, 570, 953 6, 847, 960 2, 994, 868 3, 448, 455 53, 599, 461 6, 831, 599 11, 289, 394 15,518,918 12,497,545 7, 473, 791 1, 441, 361 9, 023, 337 6, 777, 256 2, 861, 730 29, 564, 665 3, 703, 853 14, 359, 635 8, 085, 626 5, 494, 933 26, 277, 400 1, 639, 070 1, 776, 291 7, 034, 544 3, 911, 110 8, 764, 536 851, 328 6, 115, 268 6, 246, 289 4, 949, 388 5, 375, 713 3, 378, 135 20, 937, 686 6, 410, 780 16, 036, 303 3, 347, 140 23, 495, 341 $394, 523 533, 809 197, 730 237, 603 235, 977 861,354 140, 532 475, 834 1, .383; 538 333, 714 126, 577 54, 398 214, 916 1, 133, 424 210, 693 145, 953 100, 8.36 309, 965 493, 887 470, 916 439, 680 390, 540 37, 030 517, 346 255, 911 6,396 448, 716 68, 546 194, 910 315, 349 301, 184 145, 423 134, 676 1, 596, 333 174, 490 388, 926 554, 153 342, 186 330, 851 58, 096 397, 462 210, 437 110, 076 1, 111, 922 80,847 612, 346 265, 085 254, 679 375, 798 67,359 79, 430 250, 364 112, 793 317, 744 35, 194 320, 163 248, 199 158, 559 184, 042 142, 894 574, 434 414, 266 511, 700 123, 850 947, 399 7,927 12, 806 9,141 6,290 7,285 16, 196 3,966 9,630 14, 675 10, 791 3,947 797 5,015 13,779 5,002 2,969 2,115 5,180 11, 764 9,987 7,587 4,191 485 9,672 9,031 78 11, 104 2,588 7,183 6,355 9,712 4,057 3,193 22, 983 6,190 6,593 8,198 7,061 5,597 1,158 10, 258 4,242 2,344 1.3, 238 1,856 7,940 5,230 5,298 4,429 946 1,403 3,893 3,485 9,731 863 4,609 4,848 8,988 5,171 2,477 13, 85J. 3,304 15, 694 2,731 14, 547 153 177 226 89 16 557 22 114 614 82 25 93 16 420 362 ^15 2 70 36 296 152 35 10 13 47 8 55 20 21 60 80 59 70 1,328 37 149 146 133 35 18 71 36 78 247 20 41. 71 60 55 63 17 386 9 19 5 100 51 81 7 9 60 30 172 20 1,323 10,502 18, 692 11, 398 8,810 7,815 27,807 4,379 24, 148 27,508 17, 020 6,056 1,246 5,790 25, 900 9, 51*5 4,861 3,031 5,685 21, 509 11, 743 10, 473 12,^7 1,267 18,422 9,636 138 11, 333 2,882 7,700 7,254 12, 627 5,366 3,508 30, 936 7, 803 8, 325 11, 939 12,024 6, 811 2,345 14, 419 4,581 3,575 31,1^ 2,268 10, 721 6,509 6,041 8,280 1,994 3,408 6,487 3,948 18, 916 2,139 13, 969 11,234 3,842 8,738 5,209 13,308 10, 365 19,024 5,140 21, 090 7 554 536 553 184 101 56 4,764 242 1,991 443 70 8 4,952 1,732 1,070 209 311 4,111 20 10 619 586 2,978 693 115 2 217 1,758 42 941 1,342 102 1,536 602 12 2,211 763 1,021 1,554 72 365 136 25 193 24 488 1,391 94 25 1,338 852 3,021 2,706 31 2,585 1,369 867 4,079 204 1,008 436 7,433 14, 311 16, 710 7,758 12, 152 19,287 7,338 23, 767 9,692 21, 860 7,719 862 11,286 24,962 12,230 7,219 4,622 4,656 28, 511 10,208 8,846 4,709 1,153 18, 414 16, 047 162 15, 862 3,883 12, 269 13,534 16, 601 9,932 5,947 32, 935 8,^4 10, 522 7,140 11,802 8,768 2,718 18, 434 6,518 3,343 9,292 2,100 5,912 4,603 8,726 1,376 1,836 3,541 4,827 3,058 21, 866 2,710 12, 971 12, 760 3,130 11,580 6,226 16,558 13,670 25,906 4,855 17, 666 5,965 71,334 40,818 79, 789 18,268 5,740 7,710 43, 934 11,097 77,155 12,413 665 14, 017 II, 666 25,702 13, 719 4,221 8,131 78,235 7,587 4,546 2,566 1,402 54,981 39, 094 547 9,921 •4, 460 55, 121 17, 865 39, 917 17, 174 6,961 7,087 57, 610 2,645 4,233 IS, 452 12, 491 6,565 75, 081 8,049 3,783 4,547 3, 063 7,193 6,169 7,798 482 1,554 11, 545 4,059 4,200 38,620 5,6 24, 817 36,428 3,648 44, 110 10,984 351,2.52 19,'493 45, 590 6 997 12, 59? 6, 548, 844 662, 050, 707 22, 442, 843 8,832 673, 547 CO, 371 085, 575 1. 631, 540 STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA. 123 AGRICULTURE, LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. 18, 864 28,83L 20, 929 15, 774 18,539 38,410 9,059 18, 205 2J, 742 24,087 7,642 3, 423 17, 639 31,515 11, 794 9,039 7,602 17, 296 16,331 29, 924 22,892 9,039 1,006 15, 477 19, 692 100 33, 281 • 6,036 18, 920 20, 010 21, 070 10,083 9,013 54, 826 11,808 14, 613 21, 498 19, 346 19, 793 1,471 18,237 11, 476 6,528 21, 337 6,077 22,288 16, 961 15, 926 6,894 3,095 1,797 If), 644 10,354 17, 300 3,118 5,960 7,161 8,021 11, 561 2,748 30, 493 8,160 31, 893 7,241 41, 18a $100, 499 1, 792, 173 1, 083, 159 1, 024, 974 804, 722 2, 461, 025 551,118 3, 175, 457 3, 553, 944 1, 581, 738 537,268 124, 888 774, 845 3, 534, 983 864, 576 544, 157 333, 571 717, 774 2, 119, 380 1, 353, 183 1, 039, 390 1, 090, 008 108, 617 1,806,459 1. 245, 169 19, 789 1, 440, 197 253, 603 1, 071, 778 891, 683 1, 234, 306 565, 187 456, 721 3, 744,,621 880,'i44 873, 151 1,221,730 1, 267, 040 846, 572 2S3, 936 1,505,280 599, 661 379, 138 2, 374, 615 246, 390 1, 168, 962 708, 109 691, 066 794, 388 233, 338 358, 236 619, 508 386, 764 1, 400, 709 193, 417 1, 151, 591 1, 070, 137 405, 275 824, 669 509, 084 2, 731, 865 1, 111, 956 2, 106, 662 529, 310 2. 231, 055 1, 031, 266 69, 672, 726 401, 885 141, 430 5), 974 49, 486 159, 837 623, 330 189, 073 243, 238 547,988 10, 931 23,289 5,547 268, 578 800, 663 26, 922 24,257 118, 408 131,391 26, 899 683,152 363, 791 169, 273 1,147 207, 749 81, 562 171 714,857 59, 309 88, 416 267, 663 50,867 11, 602 164, 068 2, 125,722 16, 812 402, 237 252, 665 61, 764 206, 443 9,393 11, 895 263, 623 10, 792 338, 933 74,125 236, 030 242, 231 205, 419 96, 551 1, 253 29, 402 38,496 109, 016 52, 998 10, 599 38, 197 135, 178 181, 921 41, 829 30,240 138, 993 6,410 133, 104 38,452 771, 088 13, 042, 165 53,408 35, 540 57, 270 18, 786 167, 417 512, 484 77, 526 134, 766 206, 217 31,829 29,091 43, 076 140, 318 32,084 45, 891 42, 476 61, 378 87,164 16, 479 65, 994 116,220 5,573 7,892 12, 704 27, 819 769 113,840 5,9, 459 28,954 122, 260 64, 970 21, 432 28,730 97, 001 7,800 81,813 353, 607 253, 055 100, 444 1,445 10, 351 51,913 134, 447 289, 820 16, 182 392, 245 90, 674 86, 378 38, 690 53, 089 5^823 163, 634 70, 418 131, 103 19, 611 48, 535 18, 667 29, 105 44, 050 8,643 17, 635 77, 849 65, 696 97, 461 210, 782 5, 474, 788 551, 110 487, 580 269, 294 225, 151 328, 376 1, 196,-987 399, 510 513, 789 1, 308, 381 327, 231 81, 244 45, 016 451, .360 1, 589, 844 105, 053 90, 314 250,888 457, 935 460,0^ 851, 757 715, 816 381, 296 15, 131 532, 110 523, 764 1,004 645, 580 88, 660 555, 457 486, 432 241, 039 66, 385 243, 016 2, 648, 398 247, 704 546, 143 608, 280 478, 605 589, 304 32, 360 357, 794 365, 305 162, 780 1, 076, 546 189, 219 764, 173 598, 308 326, 979 289, 583 53,077 20, 892 282, 612 223, 816 155, 851 25,450 140, 674 165, 541 244, 201 173, 471 71, 644 628, 113 123, 003 737, 795 186, 259 1, 255, 809 28, 196, 821 461, 850 869, 237 538, 702 326, 936 201, 225 1, 188, 024 139, 216 982, 698 1,198,027 726, 415 216, 172 45, 362 208, 773 1, 226, 658 304, 763 173, 698 142, 813 368, 461 447, 102 670, 750 544, 476 192, 320 32, 089 421, 095 .392, 174 2,573 437, 898 47, 486 328, 370 232, 432 O.'iS, 199 200, 531 173, 243 1,923,933 330, 995 533, 878 419,974 477, 090 386, 891 65, 964 „ 530,357 254, 801 99, 619 815, 069 137,828 431, 550 349, 389 244, 261 115,774 28, 053 145, 980 216, 057 174, 962 555, 030 54, 332 360, 630 484, 111 199, 060 317, 832 93, 605 761, 127 218, 044 i, 198, 333 210, 200 1, i28, 683 .300 325 250 32, 435 ■15,288 124 30 ■300 1, 217 81, 230 5,810 215 12, 095 99,270 4 10,390 645 2,300 9,589 580 2, 001^,547 1,804 13, 439 550 35, 908 700 400 4,827 1,030 9,037 53, 959 4,250 26, 030 1,527 170 3,837 1,609 2,390 10, 700 875 386 1,607 390 39,000 695, 405 27, 387, 147 3, 181, 586 20, 998 206, 558 97, 646 247, 568 48, 544 14, 934 31, 850 125, 970 27,750 207, 719 33, 184 1,743 35, 978 33, 574 71, 546 34, 101 10, 386 26, 521 184, 035 24,524 13, 815 2,760 3,116 167, 084 118, 352 1,525 40, 031 10, 367 152, 450 51, 127 109, 569 42, 355 16, 794 23, 949 164, 116 7,526 18, 144 46, 892 33, 957 15, 693 236, 173 24, 844 12,700 7,778 8,136 20, 866 18, 435 23,708 832 3,078 36, 670 10, 643 13, 518 108, 791 18, 253 72, 508 98, 039 11, 951 112, 506 32, 954 1, 115, 868 45j 650 127, 345 22 873 37, 693 1,258 4,715 1,236 2,441 253 926 77 4,478 4,780 4,550 1,230 67 1,303 '285 727 288 533 2,362 354 1,935 1,427 65 3,247 2,449 • 64 1,479 46 2,259 112 4,717 858 399 1,948 734 85 '524 2,317 238 2,185 786 267 454 2,083 50 199 116 165 18, 270 166 6,290 1,651 96 1,087 434 1,716 19, 042 103 048 1,846 2,364 510 3,320 965 1,609 58,401 685, 454 179, 202 200, 883 141, 788 410, 540 95, 575 403, 867 326, 096 344, 049 134, 766 57, 493 70, 351 271, 328 95, 763 97, 190 57, 811 175, 090 402, 781 95, 961 231, 666 153, 161 42, 074 438, 255 109, 801 8,130 101, 148 37,425 48, 500 111, 455 175, 069 106, 725 51, 047 325, 647 153,747 93, 394 308, 199 368, 975 138, 851 90, 932 254,067 63, 635 88,379 334, 069 46, 566 241, 759 211, 884 105, 227 344, 160 57, 368 142, 643 304, 629 100, 053 236, 387 45, 735 176, 879 353, 185 60, 098 159, 546 143, 252 117, 153 216, 192 244, 762 138, 810 187, 542 123, 090 11, 687, 467 7,544 5,654 72 605 207 1,402 118 314 1 13, 453 37 13 31 1 1,623 5,775 532 217 1,626 1,464 122 1,034 159 10 815 30, 089 369 1,494 1,151 10 166 474 112 48 584 50 163 382 1,162 10 390 945 112 745 20, 460 103, 187 124 STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. Adams Allegheny... Armstrong - . Beaver Bedford Berks Blair Bradford Bucks Butler Cambria Carbon Centre Chester Clarion Clearfield ... Clinton Columbia Crawford Cumberland . Dauphin Delaware . - . Elk Fayette Forest Franklin Fulton G-reen Huntingdon Indiana Jefferson Juniata Lancaster Lawrence Lebanon Lehigh Luzerne Lycoming McRean Mercer Mifflin Monroe Montgomery Montour Northampton Northumberland . PeiTy Philadelphia Pike Potter Schuylkill Snyder Somerset Sullivan Susquehanna Tioga Union Venango .,, Warren Washington Wayne Westmoreland... Wyoming York 1,006 48, 613 3,093 15, 296 6,330 430 21, 015 31, 588 1,748 4,408 3,362 594 18,728 4,971 1,785 902 2,575 492 3,099 15, 862 1,052 1,656 526 65, 366 8,132 19, 440 569 4,853 13, 753 94 706 1,604 32, 932 8,620 425 2,284 619 5,617 322 721 9,168 250 3,314 203 7,310 270 1,298 514 10 990 1,640 135 3,017 181 1,309 23, 451 528 1,242 5-J9 99, 863 1,932 8,023 2,689 8, lau 134, 209, 139, 56, 35, 18, 299 41 422, 84 14 II 17, 128, 120, 26, 105, 246, 5, 16, 13, 70, 82, 1 6 15, 78, 36, 276, 123, 16, 13, 151, 1, 35, 244, 114, 13^ 272 10, 79, 17, 19, 40, 60, 35, 4, 32, 46, 55, 23, 224 37, 80, 156, 8, 218, ■17, 88, 90, 220, 122 103, $18, 70, 4, 17, 23, 71, 10, 57, 119, 3, 1 1 18, 59, 1, 3,148 3,298 148 2,488 1,290 1,040 493 1,744 13 337 325 322 441 1,301 1,072 60 ,117 6 54 456 25 72 6,842 55 771 2,566 600 510 49 2,452 462 313 696 43 1,486 43 404 25 17 2 592 $10, 162 232, 311 1,259 8,105 3,544 25,439 737 2,935 33,268 2,518 662 850 180 12, 229 5 100 332 6,041 10, 256 9,077 62, 103 31, 045 2,727 5,278 1,613 375 13 96 263 149 4,005 25, 009 3,537 98 3,838 20, 112 2,903 12, 419 2,204 70 44,862 631 4,862 7,656 6,086 715, 836 110 40 22, 6.52 156 7 325 285 772 373 10 5,465 5,300 18, 496 10 13, 105 863, 572 1, 388, 326 628, 143 1, 123, 496 402, 943 2, 339, 083 323,238 2, 472, 433 2, 753, 023 1, 542, 292 433, 375 99, 635 331, 479 2,7.30,391 428, 480 262, 627 141, 539 533, 093 1, 813, 140 874, 866 791, 885 1, 648, 710 101, 400 1, 935, 108 740, 421 14, 339 784, 639 101, 972 704, 887 476, 415 1,011,878 393, 531 316, 175 2, 550, 887 702, 374 640, 108 1, 001, 923 1, 033, 669 600, 595 205, 039 1, 250, 586 458, 768 234, 676 3, 346, 870 148, 096 990, 170 518, 779 465, 666 337, 852 209, 815 333, 486 561, 605 322, 829 1, 876, 896 162, 533 I, 425, 708 1, 113, ''30 335, 986 759, 739 549, 512 1, 200, 010 1, 061, 805 1, 857, 681 428, 200 1, 535, 178 10, 863 35, 854 4,186 5,690 4,238 4,001 2,083 88,088 8,716 18, 480 10, 710 263 30,527 3,350 1,330 83 328, 458 5,658 2,333 850, 270 1,250 213, 880 37, 721 750 3,205 931 34, 784 645 55, 181 6,716 670 49, 355 11, 247 810 600 56,193 16, 813 185, 120 2,853 60 247 375 145 825 913 21,423 13, 816 16, 477 1,337 74, 340 93, 349 25 15,528 35, 010 28, 098 19, 980 22, 776 6,925 io,ii;m 49, 621 4r, 739 22, 206 18, 156 21, 703 100,317 15, 778 92, 049 101, 783 33, 737 13, 319 4,600 20,434 94, 103 17, 948 12, 310 9,823 23,246 75, 940 43, 200 39, 205 28, 461 3,487 75, 185 50, 273 414 45,776 6, 287 17, 497 24,349 34, 654 11, 986 17, 128 116, 089 32,042 36, 3.50 37, 017 46, 761 26, 116 8,910 53, 294 18, 522 13, 889 99, 887 8,975 35, 444 23,390 24, 628 27, 218 7,568 12,353 26, 596 15, 106 44, 326 10, 203 53, 734 48, 459 17, 147 35, 685 13, 409 45, 366 63, 722 47, 635 14, 094 76, 806 11,078 1,600 4,496 1,473 7,083 9,178 7,813 839 7,228 2,289 546 1,232 12, 103 8,770 4,108 559 4,655 5,673 689 9,665 7,887 553 1,607 1,159 13, 338 1,567 55 10, 320 4,549 1,138 5,492 12, 876 2,960 5,902 5,023 1,690 9,691 14 3,924 9,414 3,026 2,124 3,692 5,597 6,793 5,261 101 4,919 7,251 954 257 66 349 7,025 1,192 7 674 5 9,462 504 15,714 1,81 513 198 433 503 2,476 85 1,573 3,139 386 46 70 9 6,867 128 14 90 397 427 1,183 1,955 859 2 923 1,783 1,222 557 1,780 367 775 39 697 3,867 128 1,851 917 609 166 -76 313 377 137 3,970 146 327 322 530 186 208 208 485 221 611 260 757 1,189 318 131 9 3,155 38 1,740 276 2,362 Total. 530, 714 1, 479, 937 1, 384, 968 58, 633, 511 2, 245, 413 STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA. 125 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. o to > s '% HEMP._ 1 O -a fl o E o 'v .a 1 % CD •3 a 1 1 ° i 1 be o l o d . ? % C o m O « f-T O 1! t 1 ° e 1 "5, 1 § O P. (S 1 o a s a >^ a o K 1 5- s ° 1 1"3 S § a ■*' .a ® O 4,923. 376 6,346 090 4,409 5,468 709 18, 467 53,247 9,313 1, 179 544 25 231 23,637 692 1,051 9,018 3,951 183 1,087 100 671 . 10 1,423 68 501 703 57 758 3,021 693 358 54 1 83 1,587 297 1,125 2,877 250 600 346 469 494 998 125 4,550 752 1, 5,32 562 397 9,680 36, 442 25, 979 41,341 14, 821 8,146 4,070 92, 981 5,954 69, 755 8,907 3,631 2,501 16, 396 13, 653 14,804 10,417 27, 416 47, 930 6,0J2 3,501 3,933 2,360 33, 364 32, 049 645 6,714 3,961 29, 893 12, 248 36, 717 15, 934 5,412 15,540 47, 122 2,685 10,323 61,415 18, 918 6,588 71,922 10,784 17, 098 3,832 3,093 5,777 16, 166 9,034 1,680 12, 399 19,515 12, 550 5,995 34, 080 12, 414 36, 935 85, 887 270 36, 581 11,844 61, 043 16, 690 53, 603 33, 594 17, 274 $3,178 4,307 7,379 5, 893 12, 193 ,3, .377 802 17, 271 3,436 16,072 6,884 473 635 3,706 1,846 2,149 $199, 649 254, 714 136, 684 143, 3C8 147, 626 604, 806 111, 867 292, 676 588,154 204, 146 87, 908 29, 73-J 110, 946 783, 811 95, 997 118, 775 79, 587 170, 709 240, 801 271, 102 280, 223 370, 383 17,100 279,718 205, 793 3,787 268, 402 53, 193 127, 896 144, 971 185, 431 99, 080 104, 579 935, 479 108, 927 231, 616 277, COl 261,410 199, 128 58, 963 178, 948 114, 380 91, 566 724, .563 4.3, 822 260, 651 171, 297 146, 909 79, 525 43, 853 53, 688 238, 883 90, 414 198, 033 30, 100 150, 283 160, 193 84, 038 123, 663 81, 744 279, 895 176, 'J72 363, 764 81,797 480. 381 1 3,823 834 2,070 37,302 35 o 33 3 849 4 Q 7 5 S 6 6 3 24 2 1,764 174, 515 163 5,55t 48, 320 229 1,986 7 8 111 9 6 953 7,328 10 11 12 13 11 547 43 56 620 58 13 136 3 12, 837 826 682 215 422 1,570 1,520 315 405 40 14 1 1,894 3, 155 10 15, 812 230, 529 411 537 113 279 5,474 15 10 17 7 5,453 31, 692 8,597 54,234 92 10 7,807 10, 028 190 18,222 2,410 15, 286 673 22,315 8, 363 2,163 6,413 1,150 3,217 7,311 11,411 1,653 3,879 13,297 18 19 20 164 298 21 OO 3,483 293, 053 91, 633 1,712 626 348 51, 997 4,630 20, 806 18, 404 206 533 3,010 11,922 6.58 38 199 7, 423 381 3,2.31 2,858 125 1,565 2,371 23 1,516 5,499 20 1,325 1,308 6,577 404 15, 117 3,559 449 1,847 980 1,253 15, 135 2,037 1,481 386 29, 486 235 237 3 45 215 597 57 1,382 254 97 166 262 72 1,038 148 60 16 2,490 775 574 24 6 2 25 26 15 584 S34 679 232 1,865 517 .596 522 245 281 878 2,448 962 235 1,231 1,033 1,456 288 102 393 446 651 35 654 1,035 1,186 468 1,412 498 1,655 3,553 85 745 382 1,166 1,762 1,411 1, 5211 679 27 1 ] 51 3,920 5 28- o 29 30 31 32 132 1,899 707 33 34 10, 950 35 36 20 1,099 473 2,356 7,193 27 32 37 3 35, 339 9,680 100, 816 53,422 80 1,239 38 39 40 202 70 41 42 1,951 12, 706 1,054 1,795 1,712 2,115 185 1,391 72 266 172 119 3,C88 6,662 794 1,810 1,112 7,332 764 30 10, 811 8,486 2,418 37, 927 4, 635 17, 378 8,146 237 13, 746 3,297 36,711 2,910 30, 006 7,140 12,81-9 43 29 1 41 5 45 24 5 46 11 932 16 295 47 48 - V 30 49 80 .5, 590 1,035 2,719 11, 271 910 987 5,742 324 3,812 386 1,040 2 103 157 302 1,408 61 100 257 45 124 1 88 30 188, 542 50 4,625 51 8 53 808 541,716 62, 845 167, 558 297, 128 479 7,848 65, 653 24,955 140, 784 33, 636 10,737 114 53 423 10, 937 2,971 2,272 6,323 31 308 886 8,2.38 896 6,481 53 6 3 2 8 54 55 56 5 57 58 2 59 60 573 01 62 8,354 1,812 12,934 1,016 73 1,078 378 63 64 17 283 6!)6 05 1 21 3 312, 368 24, 1G8 163 2, 767, 335 22,749 114, 310 52, 569 1, 402, 128 544, 728 13,399,375 22 126 STATE OF RHODE ISLAND AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. ACRES OF LAND. a t o o > O g II s -* 1 6 1 LIVE STOCK. a i a rS > o B 1 a 1 1 i 3 3 S S ■< 1 a K o bo 1 1 o 1 Bristol .' 11, 540 51,805 M, 076 109, G34 1C8, 073 1,014 38, 073 10, 175 80, 315 55, 910 $1, 210, 830 2, 1G3, 828 4, 7i)3, 065 7, ai2, 955 3, 409, 875 $62, 603 C4, 493 116, 221 224, 416 lin, 058 423 876 1,357 2,995 1,470 803 2,510 3,782 8,033 4,572 308 1,041 2, 115 1,956 2,437 - 496 1,625 2,350 3,374 3,703 956 • 2,424 14,650 2,334 12,240 9 Kent T Newport 2 4 5 Washingtou . 8 Total. 335, 128 186, 096 19, 530, 553 586, 791 7,121 10 19,700 7,857 11, 548 32,624 AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. 1 M 1 3 S a a ° 1 1 " 1 o ■=•-3 if o ■a a 1 o s Cm o O .a i ° 1 P i a a o M •g .g ■e s 1 s 2 «: B & O ^ a <§ g & 3 5 1 1 Bristol 1,612 53 $2, 132 1^ 608 $18,036 13, 003 28 131 38, 965 112 545 1,850 34 508 3,784 10, 864 16, 349 33, 159 291 283 2,571 165 2 16 o Kent 3,835 18, 129 532 152 1,176 3 Newport 130 7,420 54, 699 6 241 629 30, 795 58, 611 4 Providence 13, 941 2,369 284 74, 607 362, 536 1 5 5 3,476 489 6,832 65 6,514 266, 092 55, 747 18, 566 44 927 23 Total 40, 993 3,573 83, 691 507 140, 291 1,021,767 181, 511 82, 722 1,221 4,237 50 STATE OF RHODE ISLAND. 127 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. o S ^ ,£1- Ji •s 1 1 1 i 3 m 1 ■s 1 S o o ' u a 1 o "a! .a 1 . O ■s 1 a a o s s 1 • a CM n o 5 "o o h ■° ,3 •a a s 1 1 = 3 s 1 XI m S m a' 1 886 $91,471. 61 2,800 23,704 13, 388 9,344 1,729 4,374 619 27, 107 77, 323 1 2,497 255, 163 5 4,681 53,947 703 122 n 4,a37 480, 087 135 2,421 131, 947 117,203 18, 554 50 45, 959 6,405 32,232 2,265 3,399 712 70,279 270, 804 824 '( 6, 173 718, 856 784 11, 396 132, 388 655 4 3,585 496, 468 146 6,961 119, 511 85, 964 97, 306 5 17, 478 2,042,044 1,131 28,259 461, 497 244,453 705 90, 699 7,698 542, 909 946 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. -i St ■I ■i .S fl HEMP. r 1 -6" S Q 1 ! It r o 32 123 15 185 185 680 1,009 120 1,930 1,522 $25,894 75, 131 158, 174 324, 503 128, 021 1 $2, 755 4,476 593 9, 3 5 15 4 5 20 540 5,261 7,824 711,723 128 STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA. AGRICULTURE. DISTRICTS. ACRES OP LAND. si P. >» .§1 LIVE STOCK. o 10 Abbeville Audei'gon Barnwell Beaufort Charlestou Chester Chesterfield Clarendon Colleton Darlington Edgefield , Fairfield Georgetown . . . Greenville Horry , Kershaw Lancaster Laurens , Lexington Marion Marlborough . . Newberry Orangeburgh.L . Pickens Richland Spartanburgh. . Sumter Union Williamsburgh . York Total. 2:18, 039 133, 249 288, Oil 274, 015 127, 194 IK), 100 03, 158 98, 602 157, 270 138,844 310,768 233, 295 59, 858 99, 589 33, 051 101, 241 82, 327 299, 862 95, 386 148, 355 101, 422 145, 085 225, 492 112,736 77, 118 156, 534 170, 903 123,986 87,000 183, 704 352, 203 295,414 732, 350 617, 213 584, 739 170, 598 289, 338 207, 376 754, 577 300, 281 672, 137 284, 364 309, 083 385, 365 386, 5D9 4.34, 638 192, 603 146, 323 478, 603 530, 592 201, 033 220, 642 643, 457 449, 073 191, 937 456, 013 328, 074 259, 7-11 442, 198 232, 649 $3, 938, 301 3, 445, 350 9, 020, 033 9, 900, 632 5, 202, 502 4, 235, 263 1, 577, 209 2, 281, 227 8, 818, 772 4, 786, 392 8,634,177 6, 314, 029 5, 818, 690 3, 693, 522 863, 735 2, 696, 232 2, 222, 478 5, 830, 438 3, 210, 141 5, 351, 580 4, 063, 766 5, 423, 796 5, 331, 097 3, 391, 505 2, 099, 715 4, 388, 642 3, 893, 683 4, 747, 203 2, 404, 983 4, 087, 393 $260, 078 158, 400 243, 151 559, 934 332, 808 133, 003 57, 805 89, 497 430, 057 136, 110 334, 868 218, 807 616, 774 180, 861 44, 217 141, 149 107, 034 268, 959 129, 389 141, 076 162, 036 215, 476 200, 733 102, 365 HI, 638 156, 009 212, 368 133, 751 87, 316 183, 908 4,004 3,435 4,548 3,169 2,747 2,427 1,399 1,318 4,698 2,642 .5, 487 1,878 841 3,219 801 1,320 1,690 3,505 2,873 2,970 1,555 2,623 3,388 3,311 722 4,699 2,399 2,526 1,664 3,265 3,612 1, 382 2,955 2,405 1,613 2,699 568 1,177 1,341 1,705 4,734 3,297 C61 1,386 256 1,327 1,202 2, 855 1,455 1,265 1,284 2,753 2,205 891 1,407 2,033 2,240 2,398 873 2,357 7,350 5, 666 8,510 12, 317 9,863 4,307 2,824 2,218 13, 853 3,536 10, 010 4,389 2,376 4,903 3,062 2,906 3,143 6,238 4, 6.58 5,675 2,534 4,967 6,743 4,623 2,086 6,460 4,027 4,074 5,044 5,370 1,324 1,042 390 2,330 967 134 845 37 1,596 746 1,563 274 1,452 1,182 1,013 362 347 339 433 1,109 324 185 309 1,659 ■98 1,154 192 497 560 164 12, 002 10, 690 50,228 19, 496 17, 990 5,099 6,066 5,138 28, 151 8,467 18, 364 7,193 0,641 6,619 6,111 7,077 4,621 11, 920 8,358 13, 529 5,214 9,412 16, 247 8,849 0,435 11, 125 10, 105 8,022 10, 890 in, 150 14,558 11,951 8,306 14, 139 10,849 4,7 4,048 1,095 19,063 3,3 12, 217 6,651 4,666 7,830 5,194 4,. 161 3,100 9,641 5,594 5,649 3,487 5,943 8,940 12,604 2,643 15, 798 5,685 5,360 4,934 11, 098 4, 572, 060 11, 623, 859 139, 652, 508 6, 151, 637 81,125 56, 456 163,938 22,629 320, 209 233,609 STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA 129 AGRICULTURE. LIVK STOCK. ^ \ r. y- PRODUCED. Swine. o 1 I o (a 1 OQ \ •S 1 .1 i § 1 iJ §■3 b 1 1 V £ Em -2 ° 5 .a P. ■g 3 .a \ 1 ° §,■3 I CD 37,541 $1,242,705 107,300 2, safe 665, 698 96, 507 200 2,412 21,877 27,622 70,423 16,423 88, 558 1 26, 058 739,575 95, 065 2,518 579, 682 28, 76 L 4,560 5,865 5,010 16,571 36, 796 10, 100 106, 926 2 67,399 1, 450, 479 20, 573 9,842 1, 022, 475 12,866 10, 499 235, 255 23 490 11,813 33, 377 171, 605 104, 176 3,820 2,502 185 290 3 85,369 i;254, 608 1,730 1/917 618, 959 18,79A918' 500 \ 19, 121 530, 156 4 39, 741 912,399 40 / 461 383, 316 13, 757 18,899,51? 53 6 381 19, 381 52, 456 60, 812 26, 099 38,144 7,909 3,108 323, 042 29,584 47,954 22,489 794, 190 51, 895 / 3,642 1,245 424, 815 35, 983 25, 631 16, 486 5,012 17, 641 361, 659 23,423/ 235, 481 343 315 5,165 7 17,838 407,704 4,032 221 341, 987 6,339 734, 582 100 9,568 5,955 23,043 50 109, 881 8 53,756 1,342,845 /4,tm 3,270 599, 296 8,116 22, 838, 984 30, 810 9,731 50,435 102, 380 2,085 457, 149 35,048 708, 525 1, 692,7-lf^ / 21,244 4,511 496,521 40,842 46,313 260 16,923 6,078 116, 667 4,059 131,940 10 62, 760 77,499 8,176 949, 117 152, 735 5,477 1,920 27,; wr 26, 592 89,412 17,707 160,201 11 23,460 ^^-^98, 000 47,523 6,912 522, 200 42, 956 14, 908 3,4^5 19,770 12,951 61,849 9,554 82,385 IS 11^44r 316,710 2,220 460 139,375 8,755 55, 805, 385 50 100 7,054 19, 270 3,039 139, 970 13 /^677 720, 317 82, 015 7,166 623,288 20, 025 620 15, 180 2,682 13, 956 36, 185 13, 689 88, 387 14 ^ 28, 309 258, 916 38 370 128, 078 500 237,947 1,792 447 8,774 20, 649 643 131, 135 15 16, 088 490, 916 16, 798 561 284, 174 9 989 11, 499 9,385 10, 621 6,742 39, 516 23,857 64, 784 60, 360 68, 149 1 006 48,363 20, 597 98, 004 84, 483 171, 676 16 15, 551 454,488 30, 781 715 361,421 613, 486 406, 269 24, 824 76, 264 18 478 1 838 30, 939 1, 214, 797 111, 400 2,586 1,395 32,289 661, 749 68, 812 560 41, 642 4 415 8,415 8,223 2,376 7,365 10 53,109 703, 357 6,217 5,414 495, 285 33, 332 17C, 518 323 13, 692 20 20,937 516, 729 12,899 3,048 315, 122 38, 007 21,416 50 13, 596 7,293 59, 103 4,535 86, 104 81 26, 048 957, 956 87, 716 692 452, 191 43 749 2,280 17, 476 16, 315 9,824 16, 887 64,220 ■ 93,399 13 216 83, 599 182, 043 go 43,449 969, 351 22,124 1,011 686, HO 5,150 476,762 8,520 1,240 23 30, 701 626,496 57,450 4,842 675, 407 13,714 4,527 24, 073 939 22, 741 20, 961 13, 327 104, 290 84 11, 613 298, 332 7 235 640 223 401 18, 125 48, 145 9,286 1,019 9,94C 6,279 4,371 21,639 23,909 42, 060 1,618 12, 496 39, 782 100, 136 85 59, 147 865, 620 141, 648 16, 540 800, 960 8,807 26 35,481 805, 311 6,982 2,185 595, 480 19,227 364, 679 15 18, IDS- 9.300 113, 838 6,056 246, 602 27 24,102 693, 745 73,586 1,192 496, 713 36,003 8 295 IS, 874 7,096 38, 673 8,185 42, 765 28 37, 025 28, 708 593, 594 2,565 101,793 173 312 564 4 862 381,809 33 6,571 10, 303 9 068 41,379 34,044 3,237 10, 366 ■ 146,523 42, 163 *'9 880, 675 ],692 616, 735 42, 833 2, 444 17, 403 30 965, 779 23,934,465 1,285,631 89, 091 15, 065, 606 936, 974 119,100,528 104, 412 333,412 427, 102 1,728,074 226, 735 4,115,688 17 130 STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, AGRICULTURE. DISTRICTS. PRODUCED. 4h OQ 1 i 1 1 V 1 1 " 1 1 13 11 jl § Pi 1 Cm i CO 1 1 .a s ° 1 u 1 .a P 1 tM 1 Abbeville 1,392 413 $1,655 2,437 2,553 5,619 360 227, 175 230,811 92,365 92, 066 54, 068 143, 960 41,434 31, 267 127, 916 40,464 230, 393 171,328 16, 030 184, 443 6,510 51, 070 64, 393 193, 640 54,144 56, 714 41,452 108, 700 70, 108 131,444 33,773 226,487 86,123 101, 118 35, 749 232, 789 4,873 4,893 164 4,038 13,551 2,118 1,448 o Anderson ?550 23,873 200 106,213 125 T 16,882 10, 401 5,009 83 3,732 9,262 1,695 4,385 29, 891 18, 875 310 2,222 425 10,671 4,188 7,273 12,787 5,360 2,096 10,370 1,770 535 2,275 20, 298 19, 190 9,142 5 4 20 30 ■i Charleston 6 Chester 469 94 36 7 Chestei-fleia 500 55 R Clarendon q Colleton .... 20 4,508 200 12,381 5,221 435 4,477 745 4,704 12 3,931 1,901 116 2,542 28 4,667 1,215 5,302 103 2,855 608 3,868 23 If) Darlington . . 25 2,245 1,575 10 585 97 363 447 1,871 132 2,635 128 1,177 166 10 73 484 413 462 310 188 5 10 n Edgefield 587 351 193 35, 816 100 22 7 4,290 228 27 19 Fairfield 75 20 45 7 13 10 10 75 8 10 14 Greenville 256 112 Ti Ifi Kershaw 17 Lancaster 1 1,874 2,059 3 18 Laurens 50 52 11 Lexington . . . "(1 Marion 100 193 91 22 3,306 2 114 ISO 258 5 oo 50 1,460 "1 04 Pickens 12 290 175 7,764 675 10 25 573 255 05 Richland . 9fi 8 33 5 07 5 OR 615 237 10 9q Williamsburgh ... 64 228 in York 80 5 3,207 1,368 1 Total 11, 490 602 213,389 24,964 187,348 3, 177, 934 1,543 87,587 28 38 122 STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA. 131 AGEICULTUEE. PRODUCED. 1 i ■a •a a HEMP. 2 a 1^ O "1 P. g o Pi u g ■s if ^ o t II 1 o 1 h ■s 1 CM o i p< i If m g h I n S •a i •a i § 4,177 1,402 2,126 2,654 1,288 1,043 305 1,641 1,105 285 1,986 162 1,409 1,551 203 3,076 1,988 204 706 1,787 637 1,863 543 1,084 472 3,086 449 4,764 645 1,774 69 1,574 29,328 30, 474 20, 573 11, 016 2,159 20, 006 9,113 6,106 21,813 2,584 25,456 11,123 3,199 43, 158 14,307 2,514 11, 018 30,646 16,064 16, 624 8,785 13, 766 27, 017 45,752 2,159 48,274 7,572 24,867 835 20,771 $37, 186 86, 688 20, 036 17, ori 1,376 10,455 10,815 2,323 22, 203 535 36, 269 11, 789 25, 120 35, 663 27, 401 19, 091 22,435 37, 965 24, 341 69, 267 10,280 25,894 10, 026 49, 879 1,425 49,833 99, 750 17, 391 205 32, 412 $328,204 233, 940 347, 369 164, 016 185, 304 177, 858 103, 127 112, 166 187, 515 212, 799 418, 455 337, 504 36, 710 205,298 147, 805 123, 346 115, 373 297, 631 160, 603 287, 054 173, 134 259, 559 230, 783 181, 444 37, 834 260, 210 217, 482 194, 977 126, 357 207,835 1 1 300 615 4,492 6,767 2 3 3 24 60 4 r| 799 6 7 224 8,062 8 125 166 9 10 2,587 1,288 55 13,053 335 1,030 285 8,563 11 1 1 6 12 19 13 1,760 14 15 16 17 80 18 19 10 20 15 417 1,043 2,158 3,915 9,310 1,500 21 so 1,400 23 23 10 295 24 25 15 26 27 100 28 360 1,404 29 15 30 1 344 313 20 205 198 15, 144 51,041 40,479 536, 077 815,117 6, 072, 822 132 STATE OF TENNESSEE. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. ACRES OP LAND. a H S^ p. >» a S3 N LIVE STOCK. I S o Anderson... Bedford Benton Blodsoo. ... Blount Bradley Campbell... Cannon Carroll Carter Cheatham . . Claiborne Cocke Coffee Cumberland Davidson... Decatur DeKalb .... Dickson Dyer Fayette Fentress Franklin ... Gibson Giles Grainger . . . Greene Grundy Hamilton Hancock — Hardeman.. Hardin Hawkins . . . Haywood . . Henderson-. Henry Hickman... Humphreys. Jackson Jeiferson. Johnson — Enox Lauderdale . Lawrence . . Lewiti Lincoln Macon 43, 373 184, 768 40, 331 33,830 99, 866 79, 992 33, 789 55, 127 95, 827 33, 624 38, 758 64, 4G0 67, 637 56, 100 13, D21 132, 763 33, 741 50, 424 55, 301 45, 152 184, 624 34, 846 85, 317 121, 509 190, 238 79, 108 150, 854 17,342 67, 628 37, 409 111, 888 64, 988 98, 921 138, 026 97, 450 118,299 51,867 42, 550 64, 478 111, 405 25, 641 114, 390 33, 539 40, 862 9, 773 203, 640 43, 441 138, 230 92, 458 187, 957 93, 812 199, 800 124, 555 100, 556 94, 946 180, 432 81,132 110, 855 182, 705 159,727 107, 481 164, 005 116, 084 132, 664 122, 453 231, 657 98, 375 176, 914 280, 626 150, 775 253, 525 189, 249 124, 067 193, 049 79, 833 187, 271 79, 709 217, 892 302, 450 195, 629 214, 484 239, 144 222, 217 215, 179 241, 592 188, 792 148, 321 77, 252 208, 641 117, 825 183, 537 54,934 192,643 119, 909 $1, 151, 340 7, 071, 904 D74, 861 914, 642 3, 304, 096 2, 669, 725 748, 164 2,406,561 2, 71.5, 288 1, 168, 255 1, 587, 451 1, 558, 030 2, 320, 967 1, 795, 893 268, 900 13, 929, 974 736, 009 1, 858, 285 1, 541, 760 2, 685, 335 4, 661, 335 501, 776 2, 772, 390 6, 758, 1)00 9, 099, 460 1,919,203 5, 021, 755 504, 332 2, 569, 445 1, 040, 405 3, 173, 184 1, 722, 067 2, 810, 483 6, 624, 331 1, 798, 197 4, 059, 828 1, 693, 224 1,568,223 1, 639, 505 4, 224, 357 786, 806 4, 480, 870 1, 857, 255 1, 181, 148 292, 050 8, 243, 905 1, 246, 301 $82, 056 156, 458 49, 519 34, 715 140, 904 91,288 26, 897 69, 154 114, 950 37, 579 31, 870 58, 089 50, 149 52, 969 12, 459 208, 101 45, 599 58, 819 73, 783 76, 247 237, 687 24, 576 82, 428 195, 123 200, 229 05, 384 192, 253 19,725 72, 263 24, 446 172, 297 84,838 86, 829 192,234 113, 935 118, 830 79, 313 53, 364 47, 696 170, 131 25, 943 202, 253 67, 461 48, 699 13,492 230, 773 38, 837 1,762 8,503 3,180 1,077 4,006 2,834 1,334 3,668 .3, 692 1,374 1,616 3,770 2,692 2,880 592 5,664 1,694 2,911 2,786 3,056 3,093 1,179 3,874 6,797 7,883 3,396 6,310 894 2,666 1,528 2,701 2,474 4,229 3,546 3,410 4,312 2,804 2,485 2,954 4,241 820 4,815 1,980 2,104 587 8,452 2,526 384 3,742 629 319 865 799 388 1,327 1,736 261 645 247 518 628 77 3,374 617 747 1,391 931 3,697 177 1,507 2,865 4,243 561 1,068 228 544 153 1,926 1,112 720 2,561 1,459 3,026 1,770 950 684 1,328 60 1,070 813 683 233 5,069 596 3,653 4,964 2,289 1,150 3,266 2,386 1,410 2,328 3,525 1,380 1,610 2,967 2,597 3,071 864 4,610 1,865 1,937 2,822 3,413 5,349 1,628 3,445 5,426 5,415 1,972 5,035 795 2,742 1,468 3,971 3,097 3,378 4,560 3,577 4,130 2,382 2,369 2,668 2,845 1,118 3,969 2,858 1,828 572 6,842 1,687 644 1,804 1,371 504 652 768 698 1,'341 1,661 171 823 2,158 897 1,060 313 559 1,196 1,464 1,291 1,429 1, 906 877 1,238 2,619 2,635 401 1,024 724 1,687 1,990 1,207 1,794 2,371 1,823 1,338 1,432 2,002 812 300 731 1,157 1,032 431 3,066 1,051 2,976 13, 443 2,787 5,263 5,550 3,802 3,160 2,705 4,353 3,857 3,734 5,036 2,867 3,920 1,967 7,539 3,330 1,975 5,293 6,038 10, 755 2,589 5,125 9,100 7,804 3,953 8,155 932 4,557 1,879 6,803 4,337 5,884 9,056 6,667 6,527 3,087 4,588 3,765 5,945 1,759 5,123 3,545 3,608 788 8,867 2,073 6,919 21, 375 6,617 4,179 11, 097 7,5 5,294 8,506 10, 276 4,110 4,367 10,882 6,529 7,125 2,651 15, 940 5,844 8,093 9,282 6,735 11, 269 4,749 9,480 16,833 15, 684 6,991 18, 826 2,021 5,127 5,254 7,604 7,867 16, 881 11,627 9,203 13, 824 8,967 9,493 10, 479 13,647 3,910 10, 329 2,757 5,744 2,587 19, 534 6,362 STATE OF TENNESSEE. 133 AGRICULTUKE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. S=« OQ 13, 630 C8, 901 19, 667 9,005 24, 639 17, 839 12, 05a 22,076 35, 518 12, 657 15, 712 23,851 31,834 20, 858 6,809 36, 590 17,7)5 22, 309 23, 448 34, 575 41, 124 12, 858 33, Oil - 68, 486 62, 877, 23,296 .34, 713 6, 7.57 2J,317 12, 944 33, 586 27, 854 29, 264 45, 765 33,621 38, 327 21, 381 22,103 25,463 26,054 7,683 27, 793 23, 426 12, 522 5, 200 . 87, 192 14, 965 $334, 939 1, 493, 052 378, 875 250,825 663, 718 403, 774 240, 061 763, 453 728, 796 212, 155 343, 012 467,222 542, 853 472, 993 116, 544 1, 094, 653 338, 552 506, 233 623, 275 607, 200 1, 171, 945 246, 675 783, 888 1, 355, 267 1, 728, 981 424, 788 980, 817 162, 609 463, 942 269, 751 830, 457 625,116 710,772 973, 750 677, 337 957, 199 675, 811 478, 347 507, 323 411, 302 137, 114 846, 253 462, 579 386, 620 135, 380 2, 029, 500 419, 524 208, 580 20, 442 18, 880 106, 341 102, 097 23,739 53, 402 62,825 59, 744 13,386 48, 742 88, 453 38, 008 . 3,247 69,824 14, 621 39, 036 22,722 34, 503 59,364 13,583 58, 971 93, 967 90, 358 84, 566 259, 656 11,025 78, 508 27,889 39, 349 27, 169 127, 679 51, 760 36,533 115, 392 18, 648 22,107 34, 587 163, 946 21, 018 138, 293 18, 585 27,255 5,744 131, 248 21, 251 422 15,242 101 1,053 280 113 376 4,444 1,547 615 439 1,578 741 5,975 1,985 3,528 175 1,716 691 1,647 7,487 2,072 5,710 3,641 11, 670 2,241 3,352 850 780 1,289 15, 960 835 1,628 6,126 2,022 1,773 1,183 358 3,107 1,242 4,516 1,423 754 2,372 299 IS, 060 1,585 342, 650 1, 333, 522 406, 903 314, 400 557, 680 540, 312 281, 348 559, 162 707, 498 197, 695 349, 792 456, 473 618, 210 532, 990 79, 865 1, 114, 901 341, 266 519, 740 503, 241 565, 570 852, 980 170, 330 760, 385 994, 437 1, 129, 129 516, 971 923, 893 172, 035 606, 160 289, 810 636, 621 546, 114 690, 640 822, 871 586, 071 965, 545 592, 863 538, 271 584, 475 892, 591 91, 625 779, 504 375, 761 339, 990 104, 773 1, 592, 715 349, 034 23,674 31, 178 916 12, 302 57, 217 23, 232 23, 810 10, 457 4,846 58, 839 7,050 64,192 45, 302 5,595 2,478 62, 514 760 4,752 7,602 2,033 2,678 10, 398 17, 665 5,210 43, 633 92,072 139, 211 2,766 15,327 46, 754 4,204 1,365 119, 630 3,605 2,451 4,898 4, 365 1,717 5,414 105, 206 47, 182 U9, 414 385 3,607 520 73, 326 16,283 60 35 385 362 300 8,502 50 56 460 800 15 5,513 125 676 4,700 85 9,356 262, 605 1, 468, 949 7,010 14, 145 9,751 7,180 36, 405 2, 573, 540 7,325 386, 178 11, 920 13, 232 9,990 3,195 138, 550 244, 964 67, 212 586, 088 2, 564, 503 230 19, 355 14, 565 1, 838, 367 5,525 45,837 19, 398 3,015 8,417 11, 474 230 6,995 23,738 11, 914 77, 080 5, 071, 075 43, 996 196, 957 851, 227 36, 135 748 26, 441 82, 495 11, 580 1,200 18, 747 1, 506, 711 500 255 5 966 8 3,753 9 165 419 454 31 946 35,281 163 7,234 11, 602 3 19,237 26, 537 7,218 225 140 258 12 6,408 68,441'- 4,226 4,533 10, 750 42. 738 8,669 7,783 21, 174 11,311 8,221 17, 447 18, 159 9,904 6,466 17, 157 14, 320 10,662 4,839 36, 656 10, 261 16, 303 17, 743 10, 795 18, 503 10, 781 17, 675 25, 393 30, 266 12, 636 34, 498 5,330 9,632 11, 105 13, 301 14,008 24, 943 20, 741 15, 338 23,208 16, 374 16, 031 17,123 24, 494 8,384 19,277 4,514 11. 739 3,495 38, 534 9,283 814 4,358 5,701 836 6,749 6,848 1,324 1,477 20, 412 1,390 2,479 922 222 2,270 219 11, 403 4,553 659 2,499 4, 646 60, 592 852 14, 400 34,935 4,762 855 4,024 1,568 7,471 1,133 62, 466 6,978 3,458 9,340 18, 137 3,928 407 1,564 595 38 458 6,646 1,951 1,170 174 ' 4,278 3,211 8,920 28,106 7,072 6,969 11, 968 7,724 6,761 9,038 8,821 12, 689 9,916 13, 399 11, 788 10,001 9,153 50,465 7,287 1,096 11, 579 9,321 20, 810 9,845 14, 626 25, 581 19, 745 7,422 21, 101 6,390 9,666 5,565 14, 601 7,774 15,513 20, 693 9,135 9,184 7,448 8,101 12, 279 12, 490 8,293 23,456 10, 595 7,199 1,964 22, 381 17, 911 16, 570 45, 866 26, 285 10, 910 36, 015 29,891 8,217 13, 866 54, 749 8,630 18, 204 9,524 17, 332 24, 283 5,747 90, 997 20, 752 16, 135 26, 598 40, 113 84, 579 10, 299 33, 635. 87,226 31, 509 15, 067 22, 479 8,504 27, 387 5,960 63, 209 25,258 14, 727 68, 334 47, 675 59, 978 20, 607 23,396 23,560 30,284 1,275 44, 519 28,032 17, 410 2, 754 39, 659 18, 356 134 STATE OF TENNESSEE. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. o n o £ •" p. ° s f o CfH* O of a 13 o 1 s 11 1 1 1 o 1 p< i 1 Eh' O o o fl u o o a 1 44 o e p. K 1 30 11 23 $549 32 69 84 69, 628 344, 141 93, 218 35, 580 146, 456 118, 037 55,883 83, 989 118, 348 59, 721 37, 335 114, 605 120, 283 67, 848 19, 984 226, 019 75, 142 92, 655 98, 892 85, 047 244, 251 56, 055 133,970 232, 665 203, 305 72, 300 224, 158 22, 037 110, 263 49, 139 145, 590 150, 429 166, 310 169, 834 113, 684 110, 585 77,498 111, 557 105, 825 169, 966 51, 462 186, 374 58, 773 74, 236 23, 115 213, 753 31, 031 1,637 2,617 3 350 6,560 1,471 14 947 469 1,085 781 3,317 37 352 7,002 2,102 386 897 518 1,573 210 943 1,092 273 370 9,774 138 755 786 S43 6,365 133 575 851 5,885 850 6,993 136 1,865 517 3,841 235 3,922 538 243 2,287 2,035 236 53 4,273 917 6,430 320 118 28 2,670 2 33 S 113 473 SO 159 ^ Bedford $835 T /{ 55 49 110 7 494 218 371 436 677 6 479 309 67 10 277 31 186 48 3,392 184 501 140 133 2,039 167 158 1,189 407 25 267 241 220 96 436 117 163 1,536 341 2,013 453 180 31 293 158, 241 500 91 1,693 IC 30 33 'S Blount 20 150 775 704 57 55 52 8 209 3 20 37 ^ 175 35 70 47 7 R 75 6 137 115 21, 214 21 q Carroll 10 1,647 1 301 105 10 Carter 81 21 n 1 28 S3 !*> 7,727 10 2,586 2,159 425 2,035 8,177 105 130 50 25 22 I't Cocke 40 I'l Coffee 10 535 3,028 3,053 180 1,831 392 14, 459 231 Cumberland 4,239 233 35 31 2,000 102, 793 10 283 5 15 20 2 16 fi 377 7 ft DeKalb 100 10 95 q Dickson ?0 Dyer 35 3 14 8 1 14 34 ?1 Fayette 100 136 7 913 30 1,327 220 50 156 2,154 12,416 642 650 3,858 ?1 Franklin 78 475 101 192 177 213 70 449 14 1,538 2,305 2,077 '1 Gibson 22, 312 1,608 83 6,158 265 570 6,844 3,770 2,431 2,544 14, 433 12, 659 13, 975 284 319 871 52 15 1 6 >=i Giles iR 81 580 593 50 35 943 ^7 131 136 1,481 64 10 43 '8 Grundy n Hamilton m Hancock 1 n Hardeman 93 525 20 10 18 6 18 43 66 3 V^ Hardin . , . 285 10, 145 40 486 237 142 781 480 3,392 2,827 18, 767 53 374 n Hawking 14 60 13 1 386 433 115 57 255 H Haywood 175 3,470 1,442 «! 35 10 13 32 24 25 4,300 496 71 61 106 n 7 R Humphreys 63 78 95 10 30 122 5 p fl Jefferson 236 54 744 8,480 3,413 98 20, 349 3 ■72 4 3 91 1,502 n LUnderdale f Lawrorxo 10 5,404 65 3,450 28 1,407 280 3,233 1 192 a 2,886 17 47 276 73 Macon STATE OF TENNESSEE 135 AGRICULTURE. PKODITCED. Animals slaughtered, value of. HEMP. 1 o to i s ■a 1 o V M 50 1 o g 1 i i 11 1 t SS o || a s i o Sorglium molasses, gallons of. ■9 i P. w ■3 1 1 . en 00 1 1 !=■ Q, oa II 10 90 3,618 50 258 50 2,570 70 1,000 14, 141 1,339 120 7,367 38, 594 14, 199 10, 519 4,365 695 9,353 2,092 2,063 985 552 1,005 431 553 2,766 967 813 369 1,056 1,119 645 288 759 723 1,780 946 514 100 1,061 1,390 3,167 4,620 1, 285 1,340 576 112 1,187 724 1,273 3,533 1,531 1,464 695 700 1,550 2,685 334 566 1,686 243 746 60 4,874 112 22,965 5,571 33,057 6,488 14,902 6,081 5,557 26, 005 17, 917 13, 733 2,072 17, 101 18,291 10,249 5,364 20,617 12,525 28, 811 11,868 18, 606 14,225 12, 143 20, 315 45, 190 58, 706 16, 256 30, 089 7,724 9,903 22, 803 15, 605 21,846 25, 857 35, 506 25, 310 13,719 13,206 19, 363 38, 975 16, 007 8,259 19, 450 6,441 8,129 745 81, 897 1,355 $25,500 24,157 29, 415 16, 663 42, 117 29, 096 20, 332 68,432 39,477 30,848 8,207 33, 858 39, 104 28,430 7,239 17,825 49, 972 92, 287 31, 753 18,357 33,228 19,461 34,988 92, 081 120, 030 25,402 38, 333 9,814 21, 069 19, 044 30, 152 47, 758 56,819 30, 935 122, 477 38, 718 24, 700 21, 594 32, 614 82, 580 19, 320 33, 537 6,550 27, 295 7, 029 60, 443 7,798 $73, 747 295,384 77, 728 44, 882 166,723 147, 819 54,865 146, 939 177, 346 54,429 84,731 113, 086 109, 043 100, 018 23, 113 253, 580 73,034 94, 331 114, 738 123, 007 224, 574 43, 907 183, 658 256, 929 413, 224 116, 051 193,740 31, 651 136, 900 53, 631 198, 116 138, 553 161,742 217, 361 168, 486 155, 405 103, 071 105, 277 107, 689 170, 099 33, 578 212, 097 71, 943 71, 299 19, 325 388, 521 1 57,227 1 a 3 20 690 793 1,790 5,381 S97 710 7,159 18 24 100 229 10 4 297 1 312 8 4 5 1 6 2,384 885 7 120 a 421 2,830 9 4,222 155 10 11 1,000 5 11,192 3,662 767 140 7,213 3,212 228 255 307 154 275 1,890 19, 610 24,708 6,498 3,729 433 4,064 5,394 4,803 12 35 583 13 14 1,802 23 181 480 18 3 15 ;6 10 123 17 15 18 19 20 31 7,981 235 204 7 5,217 600 169 4,790 6,129 2,723 7,400 23, 856 45, 613 1,917 8,820 7,224 165 8,298 25,299 40 5,872 4,177 12, Oil 4,575 6,514 48, 962 6,113 51,027 658 10, 319 4,552 11,654 22 23 2 298 24 273 5,467 12, 903 1,144 35 6,004 11, 924 75 225 638 400 3 2 36 1 268 27 2S 2£ 5,843 504 7,384 1,129 3C 31 70 6,689 35 201 15,267 994 3 217 3. 3 25 1 1,360 45 3 59 3 247 2,303 2,241 545 4,021 401 3 240 2,241 2,244 4,572 3,795 5 175 54 359 167 30 1 21 168 3 3 20 4 4 4 4 142 4 4 30 240 20 942 12 4 136 STATE OF TENNESSEE AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. McMinu McNairy Madison , Marion Marshall Maury Meigs Monroe Montgomery. Morgan Obion Overton Peri'y Polk Putnam Rhea Roane , Robertson Rutherford . . Scott Sevier Sequatchie ... Shelby Smith Stewart Sullivan Sumner Tipton Union Van Buren . . . Warren Washington . . Wayne Weakley White Williamson... Wilson ACRES OF LAND. Total. 108, 339 81, 686 160, 401 35,120 116, 387 208, 347 37, 816 109, 722 129,283 17, 702 60, 498 73, 436 28, 510 29, 182 49, 303 32, 416 95, 944 123, 443 184, 468 13, 409 60, 938 16, 255 134, 430 118, 085 41, 956 94, 168 140, 582 65, 570 34, 940 16, 395 73, 5.37 113, 752 52, 638 79, 915 61,817 172, 246 214, 884 a 'a 6, 795, 337 169, 109 265, 805 206, 772 192, 240 100, 477 256, 575 79, 460 228,968 199, 991 390, 196 185, 033 183, 983 155, 013 92, 361 171, 536 87, 476 270, 314 156, 925 219, 753 104, 140 187, 563 84,294 180, 767 104, 185 185, 589 133, 235 157, 857 135, 778 82, 756 108, 150 206, 073 223,355 214, 868 157, 500 108, 887 191, 030 120, 471 $2, 962, 346 1, 865, 614 5, 069, 307 1, 007, 739 5, 440, 318 15, 153, 853 1, 429, 660 3, 449, 290 6, 522, 474 501, 805 3, 479, 477 1, 653, 886 958, 740 1, 076, 939 889, 274 1, .171, 640 3, 420, 610 5, 211, 402 13, 468, 309 203, 910 1, 682, 698 384, 780 9, 428, 209 4, 358, 147 1, 108, 369 2,792,803 6, 368, 096 2, 499, 118 804, 440 392, 593 2, 125, 840 4, 531, 622 1, 47.5, 887 2, 942, 005 1, 341, 193 10, 528, 965 9, 939, 447 fl 3 ■a > p* >, a !B M •a ■y LIVE STOCK. h 13, 873, 828 271, 358, 985 $129, 599 105, 577 255, 315 41, 938 156, 181 281, 902 45, 342 124, 854 140, 897 18, 788 108, 009 55, 547 36, 538 34, 124 45,647 42, 872 116, 275 150, 094 265, 867 12, 138 75, 150 16, 095 250, 648 105, 645 52, 013 124, 692 182, 397 112, 121 28, 874 14, 255 63, 474 154, 697 58, 043 137, 807 51, 180 217, 142 291, 411 a 8, 465, 792 3,705 3,665 4,365 1,417 6,476 11, 440 1,402 3,353 3,573 749 3,395 2,986 1,935 980 2,591 1,443 4,065 4,847 10, 308 639 2,787 706 3,334 5,479 1,970 4,128 8,507 2,338 1,430 755 3,315 4,164 2,143 4,222 2,878 9,171 12, 070 ■3 290, 882 1,203 1,279 2,772 404 3,509 8,805 430 1,475 2,991 73 1,509 715 752 335 375 335 1,099 2,067 4,348 38 284 109 3,013 1,727 1,021 327 3,437 1,555 189 118 718 407 481 2,289 506 6,394 6,868 126, 345 S 3,298 4,615 5,235 1,893 3,554 7,446 1,308 2,920 3,567 1,199 3,857 2,862 1,533 1,070 2,372 1,420 3,856 3,361 6,249 834 2,638 911 5,611 3,644 2,028 3,483 5,098 3,732 1,169 811 2,660 3,796 4,269 2,338 5,249 6,435 249, 514 ^ 1,108 2,388 2,037 861 1,276 2,707 439 1,106 1,217 479 1,699 1,760 1,264 612 1,449 494 1,110 1,073 1,520 358 615 343 1,368 2,535 1,150 264 1,634 931 707 393 1,202 260 1,576 2,226 983 1,303 1,907 102, 158 4,567 6,301 10, 087 3,169 4,528 10, 214 1,556 4,349 4,875 2,874 7,558 5,684 3,158 2,041 2,906 2,483 6.171 4,005 12, 439 2,117 3,222 2,226 10, 474 5,093 4,117 6,366 7,514 6,867 1,694 1,345 7,410 4,921 7,559 3,529 8,957 7,828 413, 000 to 8,999 8,870 11, 055 3,437 14,521 21, 181 3,074 10, 378 10, 422 i£ 6,776 11, 833 6,878 3.4 7,414 3,557 12,270 11, 737 £3, 133 4,772 7,657 1,774 7,1 13, 555 7,178 14,735 18, 363 5,417 5,382 2,405 10, 702 12,423 10, 742 5,834 19, 142 2l',045 773, 317 STATE OF TEKInEoSEE 137 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PKODtJCED. Ki 25, 795 28,855 48,645 17,884 42, 406 — »97,e73 13, 125, 24, 314 41, 499 8,563 42, 441 24,770 16, 275. 9,552 17, 985 9,982 27,956 39, 295 ^- 64, 877 6,971 22,634 7,345 41, 153 38,745 21, 296 24, 880 43, 653 27, 302 12. 306 5,791 18, 881 25, 614 41, 670 16, 113 ■61,749 60, 060 $649,487 813, 021 1, 044, 553 284, 111 1, 498, 709 3, 371, 005 259,222 686,677 915,753 141, 205 742,748 480, 891 398, 824 181, 793 386, 037 258, 249 696, 065 1, 025, 925 2, 115, 432 109,188 429, 474 135, 494 1, 126, 049 1, 098, 544 .414,138 602,550 1, 596, 720 640, 992 217, 906 136, 164 507,795 672, 576 586, 501 849, 665 459, 839 3, 030, 341 2, 592, 550 2,347,321 . 60,211,425 5,459, 18 145,024 41, 826 64, 579 26,848 80, 940 103, 719 40, 347 133,725 123,023 8,662 56,920 48, 218 12, 175 40, 250 29,826 31,892 103, 734 159, 177 150, 401 5,930 62,374 9,527 34, 138 72,568 14,162 155, 330 105, 916 38,253 25,341 9,006 43,456 195,827 30, 811 84,366 30, 457 130,727 162, 747 1,158 491 6,566 704 6,210 15, 654 167 4,087 3,057 1,975 300 3,698 741 559 1,936 414 1,749 5,891 5,699 1,656 1,885 1,055 2,645 7,074 414 2,897 7,059 435 2,332 860 2,145 2,794 2,436 680 2,398 8,224 7,941 257, 989 655, 356 599,220 941, 645 370, 505 931, 343 2, 174, 653 328,228 629, 716 811, 610 109, 942 831, 776 519, 159 413,405 226, 362 372, 967 295, 280 751, 790 935,575 1, 561, 185 108, 915 449, 133 140, 218 769, 484 972, 793 430, 677 435, 202 1, 170, 614 485, 478 226, 900 131, 773 466, 095* 468, 777 483, 467 923,215 472, 563 1, 533^636 1,731,955 52, 089, 926 19, 815 439 1,049 3,482 63, 988 77, 437 5,037 22,266 42, 416 4,405 743 20, 478 527 10, 441 11, 067 9,430 22,540 73, 572 46, 077 1,562 26, 115 1,965 5,981 17, 210 3,515 132, 893 66, 134 2,020 36, 325 1,055 8,287 133, 401 1,247 380 6,448 32, 132 75, 900 50 10,000 15 2,003 20 380 15 1,000 1,200 " o b 17,145 6,982 97, 950 14,836 118, 330 827, 170 6,209 45,454 5, 199, 156 13,320 1, 467, 400 91,386 1,652 3,935 158, 350 8,651 80, 628 2, 288, 430 170, 700 3,337 13, 756 4,733 2,300 2, 581, 872 787, 818 105, 396 1, 121, 546 6,120 3,025 5,180 6,295 36, 280 3,895 6, 015, 104 24, 501 2,894,941 852, 364 2,267,814 40,372 43,448,097 7 6,148 24, 187 821 7,013 150 5,868 250 200 12, 229 23,1^9 8 795 30 362 11, 717 229 42 2 2,840 27 296, 464 ^ m 17, 699 15, 502 13,227 7,377 29, 742 46, 544 5, 546 16, 248 26, 346 9,511 9,935 18,667 11, 321 5,598 13, 998 6,103 18, 817 23,927 43, 431 9,728 14, 475 4,457 10,924 20, 405 11, 476 27,021 38, 457 9,568 7,040 4, 796 19, 131 2.3, 716 14, 961 4,868 13,580 25, 305 49,825 1,405,236 10, 881 11, 445 14,255 3,288 2,532 8,008 372 6,699 3,960 64D 4,082 3,554 1,740 3,104 1,003 1,455 5,672 1,634 12, 326 5,430 3,519 1,144 31, 469 7,512 809 532 5,542 16, 661 371 537 1,465 1,699 3,800 17, 430 1,156 3,417 16, 580 11, 543 5,573 9,366 9,128 11, 946 41, 610 4,410 10, 911 21, 639 13, 089 16, 445 15,061 5,320 3,434 15, 319 6,790 17, 518 13, 012 37, 574 7,673 11, 395 4,919 31, 351 25,214 11, 518 15, 601' 28, 583 13, 057 5,516 5,448 14, 263 18, 270 8,342 23, 479 10,299 49, 753 37,896 547, 803 1, 182, 005 OD 30,643 43, 763 83,144 22,049 31, 260 66, 014 9,853 38,966 41, 398 13, 769 33,375 25,664 10, 4.34 11, 619 32,765 12, 036 41, 049 41, 665 74, 848 6,995 33, 050 7,479 93, 318 30, 973 15, 579 15,641 42,217 34, 849 7,954 7,895 29,739 19, 956 20, 201 83, 435 34,138 48, 753 74, 844 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 63 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 73 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 83 83 84 2, 604, 672 138 STATE OF TENNESSEE. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. a n McMinn McNairy Madison Marion Marshall Maury Meigs Monroe Montgomery . Morgan Obion Overton Perry Polk Putnam Rhea Roane Robertson — Rutherford . . . Scott Sevier , Sequatchie . . . Shelby Smith , Stewart Sullivan Sumner Tipton , Union , Van Buren . . Warren Washington - Wayne Weakley White Williamson.. Wilson 60 30 672 Total. 381 174 39 40 12 133 50 221 59 1,449 177 100 5 1,848 7,921 25,144 10 3 9 113 164 137 20 146 11 18 15 18 1,399 305 5 20 40 995 14, 481 $141 .1,133 700 486 1,249 20 340 1,182 752 19, 531 2,937 90 21 1,037 58 7,850 3,860 1,945 331 15 323 24, 111 57 1,293 10,324 11,423 14, 760 80 50 15, 446 4,420 6,870 1,210 1,863 5,760 305, 003 191 18 1,246 25 258 417 242 110 38 613 3 57 512 39 1,030 527 204 106 328 25 34 448 294 13,566 $250 190 61 3,991 305 763 7,740 1,315 208 30 2,837 15 100 483 683 105, 507 15 90 115 33,027 1,713 91 120 183 3,520 1,058 119, 081 129,531 220,715 62, 306 129, 956 300, 437 60, 629 103, 310 136, 711 44, 707 142, 371 87, 071 54,528 34,825 81, 643 52, 993 171, 342 127,123 460, 770 60, 462 117, 083 22, 110 176, 695 159, 980 72, 970 139, 436 265, 326 124, 576 37, 611 32,855 81, 800 189, 095 116, 009 128,577 76, 041 96, 542 330, 595 1,846 60 836 2,328 1,044 175 4,271 1,496 244 1,581 190 845 450 920 3,195 738 366 70 1,391 557 1,147 411 5,851 1,900 661 518 228 5,347 240 455 198 1,221 2,007 437 679 560 1,960 3,197 317 4,364 2,180 492 1,790 229 228 953 98 1,112 3,181 715 2,008 59 2,246 85 2,073 1,408 865 5,185 3,819 929 219 38 416 6,140 154 460 249 1,798 8,690 46 1 136 208 3 5 36 17 39 119 60 1,794 4 148 5 33 2 20 733 49 18 7 38 391 1 119 350 289 40 156 1,900 800 8 115 437 131 69 468 32 119 130 190 311 596 1,171 56 51 155 226 568 71 123 732 1,031 25 113 2,257 168 192 163 129 4,623 3,139 36 4 31 10 13 94 21 12 32 21 15 100 65 17 39 19 15 166 30 5 23 5 34 303,226 10, 017, 787 135, 575 143, 499 8,572 42, 113 1,581 STATE OF TENNESSEE. 139 AGEICULTURE. PRODUCED. § > t 1 1 .§ p HEMP. 1 •3 i a, i 1^ 1 1 1 a ^A o O IB 1 to o 1 g to § "3 bo of 1 ° a s 1' i no O •3 a 1 f s 1! It ■s 1 p. (4 m a o 1 .a = - 2 1 5- h ! 5 2,650 66 100 5 27, 252 1,164 20 5,943 3,905 3,752 7,480 24, 747 10 5,193 743 587 5,643 6,947 64 15,293 28,063 275 120 774 866 703 1,023 2,783 4,199 91 1,204 742 • 929 1,271 2,356 966 71 1,555 356 1,366 546 464 811 1, 131 404 804 3,771 1,322 1,891 892 1,165 656 414 17, 168 14, 910 14,551 12, 952 44,771 57, 918 3,804 14, 969 6,788 9,482 21,713 31, 046 16,226 3,084 83,030 4,493 17,765 10,678 4,931 12, 940 14,888 4,715 12,360 48,521 11, 928 24, 656 34, 075 15,216 10, 047 6,043 3,110 22, 163 18,442 1,168 18, 180 9,730 45, 123 $33, 515 41, 384 35, 160 22, 143 65,316 63, 477 12,749 46, 490 10, 719 10, 213 17, 705 41, 403 22, 845 14, 393 39, 220 10, 437 155, 707 27,137 63,754 16,805 31, 584 9,233 10,421. 45,710 17, 529 37,294 83,599 26,461 15, 135 9,739 29,026 30, 056 76,881 36,299 18,007 18,829 322,236 $173, 946 187, 021 260, 837 69, 383 240, 541 554, 546 80, 775 168, 002 246, 973 33, 680 152, 158 93, 246 89, 523 61, 657 80, 571 67, 520 235, 847 226, 454 427, 067 36, 238 80, 347 24, 607 187, 568 209,769 117, 675 137, 833 317, 058 118,251 57, 660 21,465 108,551 154,075 115,235 193, 807 83, 241 255, 037 414,209 4R 41 fa 405 115 S 8 315 145 400 25 33 6 2 495 3 .51 .53 3 .5S .54 2,115 500 1,928 91 10 04 140 393 1,060 115 354 717 8,057 384 10 2,362 20 .5.5 1 25 .56 .57 105 15 16,031 .58 6 6,384 59 60 180 4,848 1,842 1,770 812 2 270 27 122 7 61 12,985 63 63 64 955 72 3,029 471 956 112 1,171 38,455 65 5 66 3,522 3,262 219 33 93 17 10 67 68 2,247 69 15 70 5 54 530 13,138 2,176 3 105 898 266 616 420 12,531 1,801 51 5 154 109 1,182 8,761 1,950 76 13, 075 5,407 9,250 26, 898 6,172 45 14,403 729 519 71 72 852 89 73 206 74 8 75 201 5,220 380 177 9,247 70 800 1 635 100 375 422 9 6 466 22 10 41 26 16 1 2,70? 592 390 1,130 1,292 32 76 10 77 78 934 1,341 188 823 1,010 2,043 79 80 81 526 35 840 65 62 32 83 390 84 1,040 1,203 164,294 9,362 71 115, 620 2,548 74,372 2,830 706, 663 98,892 1,519,390 3, 174, 977 12,4,30,768 — 140 STATE OF TEXAS. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. ACRES OF LAND. IS 1 •s > s 0] a 5 II in a .a " 1^ LIVE STOCK. m .9 i > 1 a M .s S. a ■a 1 1 1 1 ■g i 1 i 1 i S 1 53, 139 16, 331 3,397 58, 869 1,461 38, 671 498, 635 122,223 80,239 751, 859 2,464 136, 122 $1, 764, 388 469,225 94, 126 3, 797, 883 20, 550 1,148,154 $131, 412 34, 038 7,168 120, 793 2,290 59, 599 2,353 1,302 1,725 5,497 115 4,442 968 234 57 1,536 1 702 8,956 4,612 9,522 16, 864 716 7,296 2,537 1,268 511 5,452 180 3,430 22,093 12, 737 29, 020 54, 407 1,398 41,207 5,115 1,077 1,453 7,407 1 7,787. « T 4 ■i fi 7 Baylor* R 1,155 21, 196 13, 697 6,414 4,953 32, 633 37, 465 14, 509 91 272 23, 838 9,069 23, 498 1,087 15, 957 47, 902 3,111 59, 089 79, 737 441, 688 162, 023 88, 641 42,546 180, 498 1, 068, 966 243, 942 1,219 1,059 289,485 108, 499 96, 605 10, 966 1, 696, 890 195, 760 229, 953 247, 687 142, 774 1,339,192 591,706 576, 302 156, 417 1, 250, 661 4, 815, 608 1, 371, 702 3,015 3,775 1, 638, 606 302, 289 740, 022 44,' 400 854, 845 1, 209, 853 275, 488 1,261,459 750 ■ 65,171 12, 892 13, 770 9,801 71,806 531,717 31,472 155 1,360 59, 517 25, 892 41,243 2,875 35, 261 67,317 15, 515 99, 089 2,282 7,331 4,955 1,432 1,842 1,124 2,892 358 37 61 2,715 2,680 4,694 167 6,864 1,084 1,704 2,882 74 646 505 84 117 872 2,140 289 4 3 456 304 544 22 1,330 864 71 1,076 1,548 4,158 3,028 4,179 3,098 3,281 3,652 308 302 1,313 11, 807 9,588 6,780 265 17, 029 3,406 1,375 5,874 334 2,132 929 868 725 1,160 1,414 795 28 63 2,031 1,249 1,993 68 2,542 1,192 415 2,360 35, 376 42, 037 29,725 13, 125 11, 033 7,601 66, 744 1,358 2,070 2,996 30,662 20, 829 26, 433 5,154 37, 756 6,961 30, 000 14, 473 870 11,654- 9,252. 19, 117 5,836' 1,331 2,038 819 40 247 6,788 4,763 6,381 779 20,865 3,610 1,870 7,324 >) Bell 10 1° 13 14 10 17 IB 11 20 Caldwell **L O'l "'1 0.1 S.'i 9« Clay* 97 Collehan* 28 Collin 38, 196 216, 404 2, 090, 058 100, 115 6,533 557 6,517 2,998 12,899 12,366 90 Coleman* ^n 35, 168 16, 542 1,880 156, 074 72, 968 22,850 3, 066, 070 561, 527 49, 024 212, 416 41,853 6,173 3,385 1,712 436 1,061 210 17 5,660 8,935 2,146 2,543 2,873 376 29, 532 14, 377 14,722 6,034 4,083 978 11 3'' M 'M Cook 11, 460 8,949 47, 905 145, 103 178, 398 300, 281 548, 601 506, 593 2,342,875 34,446 27, 420 130, 014 2,079 2,349 6,397 170 140 523 6,524 5,084 7,726 1,242 1,166 3,359 19, 764 20, 285 27, 705 4,730 3,833 20,974 Dallas .17 Dawson* 38 Demmit* Tl Denton 10, 368 34, 134 85, 068 337, 880 532,037 1, 463, 556 18, 485 66,880 2,192 5,702 178 956 2,588 10, 567 831 2,447 20, 773 47, 085 8,766 10,847 4(1 Do Witt 41 Duval* 40 650 16, 724 18, 025 2,885 361 3 1,075 96 2,549 330 4.T Edwards* 44 Ellis 23,636 4,456 163, 653 7,150 1, 050, 851 103, 020 76, 495 11,367 7,803 617 735 969 7,604 2,953 3,101 1,296 51, 761 2,049 17,539 7,253 4"i 4(; Ensinal* 47 Erath 3,556 12, 047 41,285 75,463 28,747 41, 918 33,006 60, 175 204, 588 514, 160 114, 345 240, 785 101, 809 482, 563 1, 508, 806 2, 518, 614 3, 310, 820 608, 371 30, 050 25,274 102,830 163, 899 129, 175 71, 726 2,074 2,861 4,772 7,947 2,341 3,977 57 384 638 1,617 1,231 784 9,414 2,505 6,465 17,209 3,102 5,009 1,093 1,257 2,295 5,132 1,175 2,680 24,561 25,053 24,835 51, 786 61, 853 19, 290 6,617 8,574 8,458 12,402 840 7,697 4ft Falls 41 "in 51 Port Bend rvi .^p Frio* 5.1 Galveston Gillespie 2,226 6,645 10,868 40, 613 40, 775 58,096 42, 115 290 25, 600 49, 026 93, 918 183, 631 374, 420 193, 834 274, 795 1 *)10 204, 495 164, 695 448, 010 1,377,738 2, 041, 180 3, 043, 092 1, 149, 053 6,060 6,783 34, 372 32, 060 91, 977 93, 215 95,908 67, 093 190 739 1,002 5,396 8,881 5,431 6,206 12, 932 36 88 55 485 1,213 649 1,242 1,174 1,347 8,337 4,748 7,220 9,153 6,347 19,922 160 140 2,512 1,128 3,274 3,000 3,414 2,611 27 12, 816 17, 180 66, 031 79. 557 29,827 32,582 47,543 496 987 4,940 4,185 8,605 11,822 18,198 7,576 47 iifi S7 sa Grayson ."in Grimes fin Guadalupe . . fii Hamilton . . 63 Hardeman* | STATE OF TEXAS. 141 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. S .a o 30, 360 19,786 9,270 21,177 1,062 17, 750 $625,221 268, 595 284, 692 1, 112, 967 22,648 725, 462 8,057 8,730 4,463 1,970 1,505 7,826 1,578 1,577 376, 997 149, 418 1,140 400, 800 11, 362 5,380 40 900 7,517 3,066 165, 736 2,418 1,789 ID, 020 8,140 4,418 1,946 7,380 12, 093 75 17, 342 1,020 1,157 3,250 250 9,809 250 38, 886 44, 717 32, 273 9,201 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 3' ••e 40 41 43 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 I 59 j 60 61 I ':3 3,975 8,711 5,961 0,231 3, 314 12, 819 15, 674 1,170 970 1,270 24, 562 11, 166 11,485 293 1,975 17, 433 5,705 30, 746 284, 480 767, 680 464, 173 356, 683 226, 260 324, 536 923, 981 376, 014 20,783 53, 095 660, 070 431, 380 518,223 43, 364 594, 730 3S8, 463 268, 062 629, 261 26, 609 1,334 2,355 5,130 2,238 3 377 148 8,852 10, 366 13,393 9,896 21,097 840 310 10 148 5,650 96, 613 21, 917 12, 645 25, 656 218, 289 299, 820 84, 270 3,517 165 1,730 370 3,202 100 546 890 4,600 416 162 467 1,345 3,639 50 135, 631 2.3, 908 79, 265 3,925 177, 990 281, 979 33, 320 496, 400 53 514 607 118 9 6,874 12, 215 3,369 100 58 11,925 19, 142 44, 311 7,811 4,155 5,120 11, 000 163 554 355 7,967 1,600 376 2,681 50 6,966 II, 569 335 16 800 796 120 4,418 11 40 6,251 545 14, 536 4,678 11, 763 3,600 36, 085 8,408 1,380 13, 135 6 686 173 238 160 11, 662 39, 798 180 6,125 134 364 10 3,824 10, 840 1,376 1,017 060 870 72 3,588 2,124 2,713 250 627 8,066 580 225 23, 815 57, 259 8,007 1 9, 945 3,297 5,538 1,150 60 66, 935 14,424 39, 365 11, 676 834, 286 137, 528 1,169 331, 498 129, 463 16 53 10, 043 12, 197 3,973 4,430 592, 512 324, 634 150, 403 1,533 11, 961 3,065 909 1,257 264, 805 26, 610 5,040 1,405 158 1,500 711 14, 438 1,220 1 2,090 5,005 3,839 158 370 1,824 141 18, 956 9,059 8,204 8,504 16,1 L3 408, 883 332, 010 987, 145 12, 446 18, 169 194, 364 30 1,739 2,908 68,385 61,399 141, 080 14, 187 1,813 122, 395 30 100 9,121 8,658 28,463 261 491 118 123 15 3,857 1,361 5,081 8,830 10, 466 388, 434 721, 836 31, 373 769 37, 873 167, 653 19,881 30 160 1,400 2 5,280 23,589 22, 936 371 537 10 3,604 3,354 11, 306 1,706 53, 867 76 31, 591 200 15 4,928 10, 947 1,319 1, 053, 059 278, 991 88, 345 16, 889 4,611 17, 994 119, 918 12, 339 25 600 359 43, 136 1,053 708 2,330 0,B48 8,318 17, 583 21, 021 15, 893 24, 483 412, 672 433, 396 650, 883 1, 107, 731 635, OOO 574, 394 5,134 3,772 115, 476 3,484 235 738 179 1,638 10, 784 3,438 21, 896 96, 505 281, 285 320, 580 230, 405 249,585 1,645 1,450 85, 311 3,805 80 6,187 50 4,520 57 2,030 1, 499 12, 683 13, 603 6,913 9,141 17, SCO 20, 489 17, 903 500 20, 701 731 100 470 69 132 304 445 725 3,740 1,256 9,185 5,195 13, 064 4,077 23, 925 26, 176 997 8,966 6,225 25, 362 16,779 18, 510 13, 871 182 145, 865 313, 990 604, 498 1, 089, 239 859, 186 766, 730 895, 723 6,200 18, 136 20 1,023 80, 863 255 11,730 1,095 1,881 367 7,770 10, 237 74, 530 151, 467 247, 522 376, 425 34,154 1,850 50 119, 975 2,015 2,540 30 95 10 1,225 7,304 220 18, 303 3,124 1,250 5,136 500 8,904 23, 937 43, 672 17, 433 140 871 11 191 2,812 3,995 98 433 2,250 4 539 136 1,072 4,577 188 12, 425 3,954 5,756 5,553 23, 363 45, 4S6 3,519 142 STATE OF TEXAS. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. ■ 1 A- 1 ° 1 ft = 1 a 3, g § i 1 1 1 ft .a ■s s 1 1 .a So CD 1 a .a P s 1 Pi 00" M 612 11 $245 22 142, 919 53, 171 25, 955 132,081 163 1,090 1,650 2,421 1,101 3 g 2 364 Austin 254 36 1,255 908 $7, 682 7 s t^ SO 35 51,828 ^ Bee 3,640 65,425 72, 389 Bell 21 32 100 1,371 1,020 8,065 40 313 198 yi 360 5 20, 860 57, 126 25,125 525 463 10 2 592 7 20 Bowie - - . 2,885 20 11 Brazoria . 10 160 TS Brazos 3,067 7,500 67,800 58, 134 97, 778 95S 4,135 96,154 7,755 128,876 348 1,915 1,455 2,545 2,552 40 Ifl Burleson 4 40 2 2 90 2 69 10 Burnet "n Caldwell 70 850 40 1 3,700 1,940 1 9 ^1 Calhoun 1,450 580 TO Case 249 10 3,991 2 o,l '^~^ Cberokee 522 710 475 *»n Clay* 07 CoUehan* - "R Collin 4,430 188, 534 4,191 437 1 1,029 oq ^n Colorado 45 442 274 188 59, 637 96, 796 20, 639 ■157 166 ?1 Comal 1,600 1,889 465 2,175 10 i-i ?T Concho* 14 Cook 442 32 14, 385 8 50 39, 340 58,645 186, 095 1,445 1,235 7,180 3 36 193 2 6 3."! Coryell 6 335 200 9 675 Rfi Dallas 37 3S Demmit* OT Denton 157 10 47 42, 405 78, 006 2,240 1,012 4n DeWitt 1,240 ft8 144 8 16 41 Duval* 43 Eastland 6,305 , 100 43 Edwards* 44 Ellis 10,046 248 1 40 75 75 4,325 131, 000 6,135 -5, 155 143,735 3 5 20 4,'i El Paso 80 3 4(i Ensinal* 47 Erath 645 19 2,257 87 150 15 73, 370 34, 640 95, 105 86, 411 23, 570 128,281 4,295 1,350 3,475 730 50 48 Falls 4:) Fannin 215 40 5 101 35 22 14 no Fayette 107 315 50 109 556 350 10 51 Port Bend 53 Freestone ],246 1,210 1,370 5.J Frio* 51 G-alvegton 16 8 18, 150 366 3,779 38, 965 42,530 132,588 174, 675 61, 825 110, 353 2,000 1,800 282 3 178 55 Gillespie 5C Goliad 295 350 4,546 3,155 1,700 5,541 225 57 Gonzales 96 2,506 5R Grayson ... 301 1,005 5 90 203 235 150 862 1,422 42 1,310 77 59 Grimes CO. Guadalupe 558 30 1,487 6t Hamilton G3 Hardeman" STATE OF TEXAS. 143 AGRICULTURE. PKODXJCED. o 1 < HEMP. I s ■s 1 i t s * o 1 bo o g ■.2 o g 8 o -3 bo § i § ° H 00 a t o g p. i n Cm O 1 >; a o w i P if S •XI •a S go ! i it 1 o 891 CO 105 504 6,955 14, 207 50 7,198 $15, 594 17, 617 5,316 930 $129, 186 60, 134 17, 148 115, 705 1,198 50, 075 10 801 50 1,000 800 6,210 34, 120 26, 679 8,540 9,258 72,408 46, 599 4,109 200 543 19, 140 40 2,609 205 943 100 575 30 60 8,356 150 616 5,302 49 346, 640 3,856 107 465 90 499 12,836 1,183 6,945 43, 265 21, 274 35, 147 850 49, 965 77, 535 11, 684 118,744 20 213 1,244 621 24 4,390 17,547 1,456 288 580 60 1,835 11,733 211 556 272 1,148 9,325 5,375 23,064 200 10,429 12, 697 1,562 49,459 14, 265 90, 202 500 6,254 60, 281 19,048 9,377 1,081 271 549 526 ■ 300 2,648 2,489 60 496 85 1,830 14, 766 40,870 5,286 5,575 15, 191 35,851 23,377 78, 056 18 12,521 528 400 53 35 1,525 910 6,843 150 27,797 53, 403 ■ * 83 66 515 5,700 35 5,601 1,455 28,013 11,312 485 66, 583 39, 489 572 1,181 12, 909 262 147 1,401 87 10 258 2,552 2,679 24,312 1,060 36 7,275 13, 029 . 518 12, 713 8 40, 536 33,779 84,516 104, 25'. 39,353 78,929 9 120 4,500 450 1,709 5,350 - 4,129 10, 191 30, 205 75, 762 95, 713 91, 867 46, 716 600 "'1 550 100 199 18, 010 2,945 15, 909 25 170 25 8 580 14,038 1,204 280 161 18, 390 3,050 2,740 700 124 60 1,778 80 144 STATE OF TEXAS. AGRICULTURE. 1 j ACRES OF LAND. 1 ■s ! a CO a> s-l 1 ^ .§ § & LIVE STOCK. COUNTIES. 1 a > £ CD a 1 s 1 J S a 1 1 a g a 1 1 1 O OQ 63 Hardin 2,388 4,867 117, 847 10,077 14,882 44, 122 276, 979 26, 717 S65, 667 478, 115 9, 668, 809 324, 567 $4,723 15, 674 137, 536 8,236 320 1,025 1,785 3,129 15 120 2,590 371 764 1,517 4,945 3,313 180 385 1,539 1,028 3,361 10,029 19,471 14,633 215 1,216 6,497 4,533 ' 64 65 66 Hays 67 Haskell* ■ 68 19, 063 4,947 13, 601 29, 938 39, 952 16, 083 911 25, 240 19, 026 971 8,644 137, 365 459, 005 183, 472 195, 696 247, 384 118, 417 6,759 293, 165 256, 101 17, 836 112, 184 498, 041 347, 750 687,253 896, 977 1, 154, 435 634, 699 23,770 1, 137, 864 732, 120 14,955 415,848 37, 148 13, 320 42, 856 62, 581 115, 131 45, 769 3,100 41,857 34, 301 2,767 34,039 1,026 876 5,709 3,582 9,500 3,221 186 3,112 936 56 3,060 303 316 155 406 747 299 7 536 239 17 932 2,701 3,462 8,318 6,793 5,689 6,663 729 3,500 9,386 458 4,590 1,230 825 1,613 1,009 2,140 1,617 182 1,068 706 112 1,078 7, 716 6,468 20,604 21,867 23,792 24,623 4,805 75,863 5,377 13, 754 11,816 1,609 3,900 12,738 30,198 1,266 11,024 493 1,565 1,549 368 9,990 69 Hidalgo 70 Hill . . . 7] Hopkins 73 Houston 73 Hunt 74 Jack 75 70 77 Jefferson 78 79 Jones* 80 4,962 12, 979 2,201 39, 117 116, 370 23,396 137, 132 474, 687 82, 910 7,499 38,981 6,755 6,249 3,283 107 339 338 16 2,945 7,672 1,629 800 1,334 338 49,712 17, 370 9,894 9,851 2,757 1,100 81 Kaufman 82 83 Kimble* 84 97 3,350 535 15 301 30 454 1,400 85 Knox* 8G Lamar 32, 900 2,707 197, 795 28,229 1, 753, 530 111, 701 70, 583 12, 074 2,676 941 635 26 6,300 4,207 1,941 602 90, 415 8,434 12,763 2,551 87 88 Lasallo* 89 25,804 30, 896 10, 914 18, 582 1,287 2,330 9,172 23,340 904 21, 290 209, 115 189, 621 242, 759 95, 864 85, 142 50, 744 . 57, 929 97,424 24, 509 137, 565 1, 328, 798 899, 947 751, 645 663,457 97,491 93,258 972, 035 359, 635 39, 310 1,414,800 51, 957 C5, 648 40, Oil 39, 351 1,928 8,654 8, 053 27,615 7,660 89, 745 5,071 2,005 2,967 3,984 1,995 1,448 1,753 403 206 1,114 547 703 176 369 29 29 343 399 15 899 10, 717 7,820 3,106 4,981 2,474 9,456 2,531 1,150 • 3, 202 1,330 3,017 2,199 870 1,686 141 554 1,031 437 443 683 48, 368 19, 141 43,997 36, 616 93,941 21, 344 16, 110 3,105 6,337 37,922 4,677 3,520 1,201 20, 590 1,163 1,493 4,187 715 2,337 4,748 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 Matugorda 99 100 McCulloch* 101 26, 666 106,942 1,350,268 59, 003 7,601 785 8,008 9,624 38,609 21,890 102 McMuUen* 103 Medina 8,162 35, 655 165, 067 18, 798 582 52 6,739 1,441 14, 526 574 104 Menora* 105 Milam 19,542 638 24, 408 46, 649 31, 740 12, 143 2,933 2,079 4,666 48, 977 12, 695 35,098 209, 898 11, 034 158, 190 203, 145 365, 507 176, 179 447, 806 19,387 22,138 188, 385 90, 736 384, 698 1, 142, 767 25,395 543, 104 1,106,470 1, 374, 245 552, 081 429, 582 94, 598 53, 095 1,358,354 907, 456 2, 463, 889 69,598 1,861 22, 400 84, 823 70, 197 27, 512 4,715 4,114 13, 084 69, 030 8,971 95, 617 684 92 1,338 2,417 6,289 711 0,779 62 1,657 1,305 2,481 1,682 239 1 828 791 897 206 267 49 70 1,033 154 984 10, 316 579 2,717 5,181 7,060 9,246 2,895 532 8,306 3,672 3,419 5,313 1,825 108 1,685 9,175 9,604 735 565 108 599 1,076 1,366 1, 511 26,699 867 10, 487 13, 432 49, 905 4,591 56, 018 4,944 15, 397 8,124 14, 142 12,723 7,926 151 2,496 3,956 18,314 1,284 32,049 377 3,263 3,338 4,080 9,523 106 107 108 Nacogdoches 109 Navarro 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 Polk 117 Presidio* 118 Red River. . . . 42,277 5,210 22, 149 214, 747 385, 639 264, 258 1, 594, 258 758, 651 1, 610, 210 121, 446 5,635 44,587 2,482 4,730 2,653 1,136 857 552 4,580 1,983 4,000 1,713 491 1,747 13,438 153, 758 33, 945 4,487 3,961 26,515 119 Refugio - 120 121 Runnels* 123 100, 037 13, 627 1 22, 972 1 400, 651 79 877 9, 538, 442 133, 786 23,675 45, 637 2,012 527 1,018 2,046 223 441 6,075 1,217 2,122 9,142 585 872 13, 019 3,529 5,736 7,395 738 1,666 123 Sabine 124 103 9r.4 479 nfio STATE OF TEXAS. 145 AGRICULTURE. LIVK STOCK. PRODUCED. 1 OS 1 o 1 O 1 1 OQ 1 t 1 a o ■s ■S a 1 S M ■3 § O Pi 1 .Q •» g- s a en o S Zs 9 ° ■s 1 1 h 1 i 3 S 'o t; % 3,528 4,619 30,839 2,560 $78, 667 149, 355 715, 639 278,426 5 18, 187 44,728 660, 043 50,345 30 30 53,809 20 1,529 270 208 425 21, 440 1,134 721 2,643 14, 318 2,380 954 133 23, 874 59 297 2, 597 10,047 9,743 12, 413 121,403 3,065 14,210 ^ 1,203 5,582 9 17 876 260, 189 109, 765 593,154 757, 010 573, 745 509, 508 76,785 570, 715 183,599 121, 585 387,330 2,791 1,292 144, 065 86,250 57,222 197, 203 311, 030 106, 543 3,100 74, 100 112, 360 14, 653 73, C64 3,335 100 2,105 2,895 10, 900 15, 902 127, 961 3,513 28, 600 2,937 1,706 2,758 378 20,381 1,286 5,089 454 4,833 4,023 515 5 478 8,995 601 536 .MO 16, 137 225 6,643 22,520 26, 215 11,825 1,972 8,937 11, 397 24, 997 48,344 397 42,291 2,850 36 684 1,443 173 925 115 30 10, 496 22, 582 3,634 20,395 460 25 171 856 7,321 22 95 2,912 1,441 234 2,156 23,794 27, 115 10, 398 1,417 16, 628 43,030 8,064 . 3,718 1,000 .•349 130 10 460 14, 500 170 11, 570 2,278 3,792 84 346 2,217 418 515 781 30 688 73 7,563 44,604 617 13, 036 4,781 12,231 1,162 629, 197 459,262 58, 150 10 250 37, 965 88,034 799 227 381 6,566 10, 193 2,547 42 20 14 30 189 480 4,275 98 21,583 99 11,876 24 8,255 3,600 22,788 7,828 604, 569 183,933 20, 426 5,916 260 12 320, 286 5, 891- 36, 845 359 460 4,191 15 35, 083 2,575 3,896 22 2,484 20,230 125 14, 842 23,563 17,325 15,539 3,142 14, 852 9,516 16, 426 3,679 6,481 567, 152 432, 635 458,248 652 715 219, 105 332, 236 294, 860 111, 157 114, 247 374, 276 290 323 30 2, .347 158, 710 205, 527 87, 557 183, 740 5,828 6,675 1,563 1,303 40 19, 150 800 59, 313 280 1,350 8,901 795 1,930 12,790 190 1,792 1,713 737 3,086 31, 961 14,284 9,493 1,970 6,247 1,145 2,209 10,129 8,305 6,940 125 61 1,944 790 65,225 113, 105 165 144,425 15 483 4,974 95 115 5,512 17,405 80 35, 000 1,430 973 1,436 3,708 367 175 6,783 1,050 8,454 165 506 15,321 916, 844 39,238 1,.352 187,869 11, 430 2,329 36,997 681 240 4,099 • 2,372 201, 596 4 17,806 946 11, 339 20, 030 19, 593 8,335 605 2,862 420, 473 26, 508 371,511 485, 365 922,536 166, 022 612,394 52, 111 350, 992 417, 426 380, 241 461, 373 7, 995 51 112, 430 4,445 411, 865 373, 211 173, 718 78,923 1,630 17,292 9,630 327,250 79, 048 294, 355 534 2,238 11, 767 125 3,685 8,970 32, 163 2, 451. 30, 600 672 6,337 9,585 250 140 2, 301 20 8,103 12, 600 30 8,036 5,954 2,329 2,091 39 251 17 8,271 864 6,208 415 10,326 105 933 197 17, 160 883 21, 888 1,561 3,831 20 717 560 794 143 8,103 1,140 103 24,293 38,416 12,599 31,533 5,624 23,052 156 2,270 3,738 20 30 2,415 890 25,205 184 1,325 14, 390 18, 648 1,046 600 20 8,349 1,053 59, 904 7,082 43,434 3,717 3,914 21,980 59 90 711 50 117 5,837 8,355 20, 015 107 910 9,307 1,905 471, 407 929, 820 574, 984 25,340 578 294, 615 29, 115 141,439 17, 415 4,558 7,970 230 6,467 9,317 200 59, 715 2,357 1,303 15 1,470 95, 065 2,040 11, 425 1,272 1,128 510 16, 663 34, 565 6,672 8,966 750, 118 130.497 207,253 17, 070 610 5,122 5,287 97 93 653, 563 87, 524 144, 206 27,783 1,140 7,370 300 20,840 40 450 455 300 11, 791 2,125 31,342 10, 531 1,982 3. 000 17, 300 1,013 5, 6G6 8,923 1,110 1, 322 68, 285 16, 709 17.328 19 146 STATE OF TEXAS. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. 1 1 □Q 1 r 1^ ■s 1 " O r "3 1 1 S a 1 s s o 1 no ■s i = 1 1 1 1 a 1 1 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 $449 3,980 7,805 3,148 3,450 91, 729 31,200 197 J^'^ ™ 65 46 4 $100 137 92 355 7 469 930 1 2 20 8 72, 665 1,351 2 2,286 2,133 1,053 1,380 45 330 60 7 38, 595 130,300 107,471 98, 390 10,410 34,045 13,443 3,449 48,305 3,005 6,187 253 4,960 965 160 14 131 210 50 26 7 24 3 149 15 2 100 380 160 207 20 909 99 60 435 391 15 158 28 76 39 2,490 32 3,166 270 58 79 Jones* 80 81 82 75 34, 600 74,515 13, 570 230 8,566 850 442 36 24 84 P6 803 30 1,676 230 107, 712 13, 590 1,934 100 325 255 P7 PR 462 20, 661 100, 025 11, 550 60, 440 123 1,175 ' 1,250 818 50 447 100 5 nd 20 200 23, 380 1,279 1,800 1,500 m 13 06 625 6 300 07 OR 1,630 950 60 MoCuUoch*... ini 602 132 155 84,419 2,503 3 in^ McMuUeu* 103 Medina 1,105 19 104 105 Milam 320 72,475 430 . lOfi 107 20, 142 116, 570 79, 786 20, 101 3,104 5,400 34, 065 88, 493 49, 311 5,447 KB Nacogdoches 1,496 3,539 150 34 3 227 15 100 531 1,040 230 2 77 100 Navarro 105 no Newton 111 Nueces 20 12 435 1 11' Orange 446 500 82 3 1,158 65 113 Palo Pinto 149 3,850 40 1,320 25 15 11 114 Panola 115 Parker 116 Polk 117 Presidio* i ■■ 118 2,183 156 351 50 185 58,647 5,155 590 898 110 Refugio ion Robertson 150 IRl 1 122 Rusk 179 10 50 1,163 195,-345 14,968 48, 653 40 1 .. 123 100 1 "i::::. i V24 San Augustiuo 5 1 STATE OF TEXAS 147 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. o o •a > ■a £ 4 1 a a HEMP. ■s 1 p. s •3 i ft o o 8 S 1 1 if t li § a CO o s i n o a ss o ft t^ a K w S 1' 1 o o ° o 1 •g ft g 2 480 87 2,571 100 9,859 $2,141 $9, 013 12,645 163,851 10, 975 61 ri 4 20 613 7,127 fi'i 66 67 1,491 378 13, 715 8,432 44, 699 10, 965 34, 911 89,442 122,829 47, 656 3,847 23, 655 38, 633 7,000 49, 644 fiH 6') 3,694 2,459 80 861 454 216 6 71 1,845 10, 042 9,145 1,485 150 1,260 150 2,247 2,686 2,120 14, 334 26, 260 14, 828 451 1,436 275 623 6,737 7(1 71 79 25 4,646 321 73 74 11 23 1,265 2,681 75 76 88 68 77 20 3,760 78 79 27, 438 34, 118 5,212 80 2,423 620 52 13,077 310 6,043 4,080 81 82 83 84 85 4,777 470 1,113 14, 529 821 16, 797 137 78, 972 8,977 86 87 88 8!) 1,045 1,125 50 10, 493 4,000 350 1,343 71, 991 27, 838 51, 040 4,586 90 3 400 91 692 4,765 92 93 94 21, 086 600 95 30 780 96 97 507 16, 610 300 31, 360 98 99 100 2,531 176 4,337 2,657 77, 308 101 102 8,852 103 • 104 715 55 9,100 1,445 41, 938 105 106 600 23,628 700 850 60 3,866 1,566 8,763 1,055 31, 969 117, 671 60, 432 23, 647 19, 006 7,689 14, 248 80,483 36,287 62, 604 107 10 1 320 652 1,488 55 48 50 217 155 452 70 18,239 4,750 60 108 109 1 889 110 111 20 4,066 78 2,638 21, 376 5,928 290 12 471 113 114 6,179 n.") 116 117 2,785 195 2,822 16, 693 77, 736 16, 901 118 119 120 121 43 215 657 26 16, 390 10, 594 515 22, 185 3,428 4,483 183, 028 22, 863 40, 920 122 123 100 70 124 148 STATE OF TEXAS. AGRICULTURE. y COUNTIES. ACRES OP LAND. S ! o s, > a 11 g > ft >i .9 ^ LIVE STOCK. 1 .g > S, 1 .3 ■rf E B » i 1 < i 1 1 1'5 1,718 1,216 50 28, 672 82, 043 6,628 147, 575 47, 249 910 168, Oil 286, 503 276, 909 $181, 193 145, 807 500 308, 918 1,843,826 117, 875 $3,615 9,588 125 63, 360 140, 486 1,476 1,804 538 2 1,279 2,298 546 142 17 2,900 6,035 23 3,164 5,795 1,154 175 450 8 1,337 2,596 .380 48, 131 13,483 37 6,809 14,716 3,485 3,647 2,363 24 2,794 5,888 19, 142 19fi 197 1W Shelby 503 1,391 23 isq Smith T^n Starr. 1.11 Tarrant* 132 Taylor* 1,33 n4 45, 791 44, 609 11, 872 17,234 65, 690 921 9,870 31, 495 37, 587 76,328 45 23,239 21, 185 4, 211- 15, 144 1,685 1,168 220, 671 1, 318, 947 50, 452 111, 045 235,283 6,989 77,342 144, 594 146, 357 288, 597 2,000 109, 446 205, 942 24, 098 84, 820 11,171 4,435 1, 448, 531 2, 303, 038 281,239 539, 119 1,734,452 34, 616 273, 041 967,414 1,525,411 4, 313, 993 700 1,816,560 833, 418 138, 870 481, 879 27, 290 5,750 87, 212 1,54, 085 8,765 30, 0.55 92, 915 2,510 28, 714 48, 463 59, 092 198, 553 30 97, 965 57, 816 14, 425 36, 456 3,265 473 2,382 8,732 948 970 2,097 101 1,075 4,024 1,540 4,630 14 3,533 9,626 1,079 920 83 118 786 1,133 443 315 1,250 3 251 968 1,028 1,831 5,278 12,011 2,294 2,500 4,673 2,471 3,563 3,457 3,407 11,384 1,695 3,957 1,036 1,072 2,231 139 1,353 994 2,061 4,937 20 1,715 2,330 464 867 199 230 13, 183 46,581 10, 339 6,850 10, 896 3,746 8,937 39,287 13,771 35,466 7,147 11,887 1,465 1,973 3,623 409 4,412 1,4(11 2,596 20,502 135 136 137 Tyler 138 139 Uvalde 140 VanZandt 141 149 143 Washington - 144 Webb 145 Wharton 1,278 717 33 297 15 1 2,295 14,806 1,405 2,593 366 21, 187 38, 114 8,136 6,772 4,517 518 16, 952 3,818 3,050 50 146 W'lliflTTiflnn 147 Wise 148 Wood 149 150 Zapata 1,51 Zavola* 2,650,781 22, 693, 247 88, 101, 320 6, 259, 452 325, 698 63,334 601,540 172,492 3,761,736 753,363 * No returns. STATE OF TFXAS. 149 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. 4; 1 ■g S ■s 1 p. y 1 a Ed o eu i .£3 o ■s § 1 1 S u •a g 3 •a .E 1 ° s o ■s n a p. 1 12,1 San Patricio 450 450 400 77,745 123, 200 126 San Snba 250 200 19,7 Shackleford 19« Sholby 26 707 $9,95 129 Smilh 13 20 20 130 Sfan- 131 Tarrant * 1.32 Taylor* 133 Throckmorton* 134 TitU8 453 4,038 55 4,548 130 20 1,825 1.38,718 86, 500 43, 781 19, 190 64, 519 340 1,003 35 100 100 5 337 10 13 135 Travis $8,369 270 4 136 Trinity 137 Tyler 138 Upshur 139 Uvalde 140 VanZandt 70 122 617 49, 670 14,820 53,216 47, 673 2,680 1,340 11 307 141 Victoria 4,441 195 20 142 Walker : 150 2,114 143 Wafihington 40 1,000 1,980 220 854 10 144 Webb 145 Wharton 40 2U 463 98 152 20,689 70, 356 31, 585 18, 255 2,327 2,170 4.5, 145 8,835 125 146 Williamson - 147 Wise 25 505 1,270 53 148 Wood 220 1 6 14il Young 15 8 150 Zapata 151 Zavola* .■ Total 67,562 1,349 48, 047 14, 199 178,374 5,850,583 275, 128 11,865 585 5,228 123 ' No returns. STATE OF TEXAS 151 AGRICULTURE PRODUCED. O O > 1 g •3 ■i HSMP. 1 ■s 1 P4 o 1 E 1 1 ° 1 1 u g 1 o t in* 1 1 a 3. 6 CD i . 1! i ■a i- ■s' 1 o A w P m a S h I ft 1 Pi n El -si o $8,393 ^ no 20 450 100 74, 766 iSj 353 2,889 30,254 $19, 051 31,619 !•:« 205 135, 73£ 129 131 131 132 133 417 477 205 13, 189 3,360 30, 820 813 2,310 5,286 3,780 90,1-3 47,318 68, 364 45, 747 109, 116 134 120 13, 743 135 13R 1 1,682 155 90 9,270 5,127 137 138 139 828 147 92 4] 1,331 3,281 2,540 735 4,885 14,024 4,630 300 100 25, 077 28, OOS 63, 597 143, 641 140 141 143 143 144 4,000 76 369 3 353 1,404 7,380 610 6,160 50 3,159 958 3,302 23,647 41, 112 58, 849 15, 625 39, 783 2,190 145 2,268 1,872 451 140 Hfi iir 143 14ft IflO 1 151 1 170 9 115 27 5,099 408,358 112,412 28,123 594,273 584,217 5, 143, 635 152 STATE OF VERMONT. AGEIOULTURE. COUNTIES. ACRES OP LAND. I a •a at M-3 LIVE STOCK. ^ Addison Bennington.. Caledonia ... Chittenden . . Essex Franklin Grand Isle... Lamoille Orange Orleans Rutland Washington . Windham ... Windsor 263, 371 143, 194 204,458 196, 781 55, 169 227, 559 34, 247 104, 080 263, 954 153, 864 300, 833 205, 178 308, 090 362, 379 95, 617 108, 273 106, 846 84, 797 62, 872 118, 404 10, 823 83, 679 112, 837 125, 988 145, 583 114, 405 117, 907 163, 226 $12,477,095 4, 820, 364 5, 277, 560 9, 140, 030 1, 190, 049 9, 794, 401 3,920,130 3, 381, 150 7, 314, 686 4, 973, 918 10, 541, 940 7, 088, 780 6, 936, 519 9, 432, 423 $286,923 194, 589 314, 513 300, 314 69,021 355, 048 57,024 201, 469 386, 794 177, 540 403, 046 289, 281 247, 158 383, 235 7,122 3,550 5,508 4,868 1,378 5,717 1,361 3,412 7,171 4,302 6,113 5,692 5,235 7,642 12, 975 6,980 11,582 18, 695 2,687 25, 995 1,525 9,288 12, 001 11, 609 17, 335 17, 350 11,802 14, 843 2,351 1,508 3,736 1,647 1,212 2,277 96 2,318 4,892 3,601 2,339 3,922 5,723 7,017 14, 983 7,021 13,667 9,880 4,015 12, 215 1,714 6,464 15, 048 11, 295 11, 605 11, 887 16, 163 17, 187 98, 019 55,439 32, 360 25,639 6,644 32, 578 13, G94 13, 062 84, 189 31, 398 125, 643 31, 799 49, 174 152, 56:! Total. 2, 823, 157 1, 451, 257 94,289,045 3, 665, 955 69, 071 174, 667 42, 639 752, 201 AGEICULTDEE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. O 1 s 1 no .s 1 o 1 •6 P ■s 1 o s "S 1 s o 1 i = > o 3 to f'S ■s a i m 1- 1 _ 3,046 4,519 6,749 3,122 2,653 6,860 13,713 901 4,278 21,222 867 3,216 4,772 3,293 12,502 23,235 11,306 11, 102 19, 818 15, 216 13, 003 12, 925 38,266 16, 885 11, 485 13,851 5,096 20, 725 $16,398 19,268 72 47,588 976 8,381 6,178 853 291 436 42 5 72 $400 1„891 129 13,070 475 2,191 280 1, 223, 942 475,055 1, 324, 587 1, 448, 182 266, 136 2,498,298 85, 135 944, 920 1, 007, 250 1, 300, 190 1, 383, 556 1, 722, 181 1, 017, 425 1, 201, 502 885,845 476, 885 59, 666 2, 143, 551 71, 361 1,091,641 14, 800 108, 148 291, 176 109, 110 2, 027, 662 282, 095 253,237 399, 853 91,402 43,044 70, 792 63,096 19,202 88, 589 5,714 41, 861 81,337 61,534 91,879 82,.025 84, 544 115, 156 1 a 340 36 55 18 2 12 181 658 5 58 459 618 919 391 273 657 543 1,161 106 340 363 1,795 280 655 306 3,79t) 12, 194 8 26,870 2,501 29,242 3,736 2,000 68, 017 81,132 161,192 21,835 35,560 68,631 125,759 9 T 4 CMttenden "i fi Franklin 7 (^rft.Tirl Ja\R R 10,416 221 34,446 7,741 31, 876 28, 132 106 1,375 10 n 436 334 180 168 3,347 19. n ■^inrlTif^rn 1,139 505 14 Total- . . 79, 211 225, 415 311, 693 15, 900,- 359 8, 215, 030 940, 178 2,445 11, 587 638, 677 ' STATE OF VERMONT. 153 AGRICULTURE. LIVD STOCK. PEODUCED. Swine. "3 1 i S 1 1 s 1 s s % o ■3 ■s o ■s t 1 Cm* O 1 1 Si ■O o t3 1 a in* -3"- 1 i 1 .a 1 1=8 1 CO 4,014 $1,711,862 744,077 1,025,232 3,205,791 296,938 1,364,635 177, 595 625, 141 1,490,908 1, 026, 201 1,807,403 1,323,830 1, 495, 410 1, 946, 963 57,060 9,404 35,325 37,655 6,184 55,521 20,054 13,807 43,207 40,740 19,842 20,322 25,957 52,058 13, 634 13,644 4,078 17,854 3,003 8,049 1,333 5,516 6,803 9,384 19, 308 5,499 11,864 17,302 120,110 104,403 41,297 164,288 6,191 113,897 23,864 40,437 123,532 38,875 228,364 90,759 172, 971 256, 423 302,240 202,244 334,728 320,523 93, 219 316, 492 153, 161 150,515 297,825 330,032 287, 413 354,344 190,364 297, 167 479, 128 241,456 103, 805 107,504 21,337 138, 991 57,446 55,366 312,525 115, 357 563, 857 138, 253 186, 941 596,984 12, 607 2,774 2,206 7,139 1,476 9,663 10, 652 1,504 5,474 1,044 3,566 2,423 3,852 6,274 286, 343 214,700 578, 318 336, 047 168, 151 a37, 805 56,966 373,851 536, 014 570, 457 460, 669 432, 219 416, 256 486, 700 1 4,380 ? 3,901 25 15 1 4,497 921 ") 4,745 t; 930 60 7 2,151 8 3,678 q 3,331 538 10 4,282 11 3,559 19 5,445 12,120 100 11 7,078 10 14 52, 912 16,241,989 437, 037 139,271 1,525,411 3,630,267 12,245 3, 118, 950 70, 654 5,253,498 623 AGRICULTURE. PEODUCED. ■a .1 1, ■a HEMP. -a i Pi i ■s 1 f Pi 1° "3 i t- O Si t if 11 • 1 g o Pi i n CD •a m B || 1^ DQ 1 1 = 1 a f ■s 1 800 4,924 65 236,004 335,881 1,235,515 356,783 211,059 937,483 28,877 672,349 978,650 930,138 685,762 1,167,514 1,028,539 1,093,227 266 921 60 1,082 494 449 602 1,357 108 983 159 800 388 244 274 123 2,005 654 352 745 23,075 12,921 3,900 11, 084 4,575 11,528 6,755 7,630 20,464 9,557 25,035 34, 576 8,117 32, 933 $1,563 11, 145 4,357 734 6,667 1,312 150 3,414 6,982 8,686 1,590 6,054 7,620 3,060 $231, 630 112, 634 124,150 182, 347 43, 122 169, 559 26, 012 73,583 210, 985 112, 162 204, 819 158, 642 176,447 794, 708 1 1 3 o 1 4 327 11 =) fi 7 134 350 105 273 32 5 164 1,992 R q 10 896 139 6,392 3,398 11 - 195 82 25 3 3 13 13 14 7,007 331 9,897,781 16,253 8,794 212, 150 63,334 2,610,800 20 154 STATE OF VIRGINIA. AGRICULTURE. COTJNTIES. Accomack Albemarle Alexaadria Alleghany , Amelia Amherst Appomattox — Augusta Barbour Bath Bedford Berkeley Booue Botetourt Braxton Brooke Brunswick Buchanan Buckingham... Cabell Calhoun Campbell Caroline Can-oU Charles City... Charlotte Chesterfield Clarke Clay Craig Culpeper Cumberland - . . Dinwiddle Doddridge Elizabeth City . Essex Fairfax Fauquier Fayette Floyd Fluvanna Franklin Frederick GUcs Gilmer Gloucester Goochland Grayson Greenbrier Greene Greenville Halifax Hampshire Hancock Hardy Hanover Harrison Henrico Henry Highland Isle of Wight.. Jackson ACRES OP LAND. 245, 8, 26, 109, HI, 85, 224, 76, 37, 189, 90, 15, 76, 20, 41, 160, 10, 136, 38, ID, 138, 183, 49, 50, 147, 106, 83, 5, 24, 153, 90, 118, 25, 17, 96, 84, 268, 30, 52, 88, 153, 116, 49, 18, 58, 83, 60, 123, 44, 70, 277, 172, 31, 85, 141, 119, 69, 79, 66, 64, t 81, 762 176, 942 6,969 86, 852 98, 658 132, 949 98, 609 213, 515 219, 294 148, 540 244, 617 41,231 218, 873 145, 082 131, 171 14, 389 178, 984 181, 383 173, 493 122, 573 65, 096 151, 080 122,123 138, 009 48, 190 145, 001 154, 973 24, 390 47, 079 46, 382 85, 567 80, 028 169, 086 217, 543 13, 905 60, 707 115, 916 115, 048 212, 595 115, 348 69, 854 254, 420 74, 356 108, 746 82, 684 53, 418 72, 636 160, 587 285, 084 60, 299 97, 648 196, 552 376, 640 17, 228 200, 927 218, 120 547, 319 65, 490 141, 022 172, 944 110, 563 102, 881 $3, 979, 720 9, 157, 646 853, 260 1, 208, 170 2, 364, 058 2, 874, 596 1, 902, 558 10, 997, 286 2, 390, 269 1,455,351 6, 297, 453 3, 547, 566 579, 398 3, 415, 045 650, 016 2, 447, 903 2, 318, 267 229, 981 3, 513, 277 1,611,815 354, 617 3, 712, 579 4, 407, 613 867, 338 1, 239, 410 4, 398, 140 3, 263, 370 3, 645, 185 165, 344 942, 745 4, 985, 786 2, 355, 423 2, 643, 250 1, 006, 326 1, 273, 050 2, 439, 173 3, 866, 075 10, 062, 472 1, 224, 096 1, 023, 165 2,332,149 3, 684, 634 3, 987, 945 1, 760, 806 622, 965 2, 001, 234 2, 524, 327 1, 432, 258 5, 713, 422 1, 213, 979 982, 900 6, 922, 479 3, 947, 900 1, 676, 745 2, 579, 581 4, 203, 120 4, 642, 794 5, 128, 610 2, 341, 356 1, 535, 379 1, 531, 290 1, 355, 201 I > "ft h s s •^ a P % a $68, 738 188, 079 19, 990 27, 752 68, 957 81, 618 54, 538 296, 390 145, 850 28, 216 229, 101 79,976 12,471 76, 804 10, 301 48, 286 75, 573 3,985 104, 154 30, 559 7,058 83,323 107, 323 26, 302 45, 800 89, 867 80, 604 80, 170 3,753 31,177 110, 061 69, 181 120, 296 16,602 26,130 57, 320 111, 097 241, 740 25,440 49, 247 73, 404 108, 484 148, 515 37, 674 13, 738 60, 518 80, 435 58,241 86,286 36, 651 37, 025 147, 181 166, 316 38, 489 57,753 142, 934 63, 261 145, 114 38, 369 20, 813 44, 440 33, 410 LIVE STOCK. 2,413 5,195 342 886 1,252 2,622 1,588 8,852 3,059 1,134 4, 995 3,510 787 2,460 976 1,399 1,792 406 2,313 1,350 484 2,279 ■ 1, 848 1,137 435 2,230 1,553 2,631 285 975 3,136 1,444 1,846 1,182 443 1,098 2,725 6,721 1,266 1,496 1,607 3,649 4,084 1,571 815 926 1,205 2,304 3,714 1,229 690 3,837 5,222 1,109 2,526 1,967 4,404 1,343 1,530 1,800 1,234 1,330 223 820 30 71 872 307 238 211 81 37 668 19 9 192 19 18 843 12 614 66 10 675 823 1,127 112 10 20 510 588 932 2 230 669 184 253 20 27 459 304 21 67 8 432 1,022 93 128 118 553 902 27 4 54 1,452 35 1,520 544 13 267 23 2,346 4,498 506 996 1,919 2,811 1,812 6,441 3,726 1,287 5,305 2,728 1,444 2, 581 1,395 1,319 2,944 1,044 2,495 1,475 741 2,684 2,780 1,837 847 2,544 2,556 1,568 538 973 3,200 1,561 2,727 1,664 900 1,559 3,709 5,489 1, 767 1,975 1,820 4,654 2,925 1,743 1,197 1,575 1,744 2,993 3,984 1,137 976 8,609 5,522 1,127 2,561 2,832 4,501 1,901 2,131 2,434 1,684 1,541 1,693 2,252 18 84 926 1,125 841 198 418 205 1,470 12 428 135 197 159 1,439 94 1,925 855 '242 1,019 2,228 575 559 1,330 651 308 150 16 1,131 1,134 1,073 232 263 1,675 433 1,844 471 539 1,002 959 85 170 205 1, .538 1,077 755 686 227 676 2,104 6 140 142 1,104 681 321 620 178 912 504 3 O 6,858 170 2,047 2,828 3,427 2,516 14, 206 7,715 3,757 8,945. 3,687 3,078 4,843 1,826 1,513 5,737 1,785 3,936 3,780 1,491 4,173 3,418 2,881 926 8,070 2,050 3,195 637 1,944 8,098 2,644 4,513 3,147 1,094 2,366 3,919 23,192 2,467 3,093 2,086 6,169 5,420 3,584 2,392 2,476 2,420 4,554 8, 163 1,345 3,084 6,221 11,355 1,657 8,244 2,306 12,163 1,396 2,622 6,515 3,040 2,513 3,833 11,904 195 1,832 7,541 3,S09 5,223 13, 013 11, 673 6,0 9r039 7,057 3,248 5,G67 6,108 40,620 8,649 1,9 7,371 5,764 2,412 7,708 5,566 8,442 1,341 8,221 4,038 6,971 1,608 2,857 15, 303 6,499 4,450 5,377 811 3,619 6,093 24,754 6,9 7,101 3,559 10, 040 9,892 5,755 3,967 3,281 4,734 13,680 16, 067 2,012 2,867 11,334 21,287 21,402 11, 378 6,335 13,202 1,405 3,966 8,911 3,199 6,615 STATE OF VIRGINIA. 155 AaillCULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. IS 19,693 98,917 700 4,786 10, 605 17, 179 7,694 31,033 9,916 4,049 16, 175 13, 469 7,653 11, 979 5,040 3,309 18, 931 4,463 12,414 8,408 2,956 12,623 13, 834 10, 022 5,823 14, 707 11,825 9,642 2,412 4,318 13,532 6,965 17,081 4,332 5,311 8,079 11, 660 26,912 7,723 10,280 8,792 20, 401 12, 939 9,316 3,864 10, 661 8,391 16, 622 10, 971 ' 6,517 10, 820 22,012 14, 619 2,465 7,032 15, 757 11, 496 9,046 8,597 3,740 22,727 6,538 I $345, 628 899, 680 44, 445 161, 153 372, 640 370, 824 265, 772 1, 287, 615 377, 693 187, 823 837, 393 335, 75^ 120, 589 380, 728 109, 456 282, 439 430, 309 68, 248 419, 349 195, 674 74, 651 359, 778 450, 654 162, 470 165, 955 441, 494 399,767 3:J5, 667 41, 824 124, 926 540, 572 352, 135 484, 278 142, 269 123,845 269, 403 371, 443 1, 494, 504 177, 440 216, 151 318, 213 493, 103 519, 296 257, 222 113,722 225, 926 348,457 339, 552 676, 298 154, 767 186, 375 684,536 763, 454 182, 746 453, 768 514, 828 644, 325 423,672 282, 659 269,337 252, 697 173,354 29, 342 302, 307 5,505 21,657 124, 200 104, 111 39, 376 307, 402 37,835 15, 311 318, 277 237, 576 15, 278 162, 676 22, 366 23,490 142, 155 5,164 114,921 65,715 10, 734 150, 679 214, 565 30, 804 126,921 161, 596 133, 350 330,^53 4,433 29,001 191, 358 82, 178 133, 515 16, 514 44, 013 123,871 49, 318 280,279 25, 693 39, 847 127,704 124, 396 224,471 54,874 18, 609 100, 436 174, 129 46, 742 52, 017 28, 743 43, 105 237, 518 106, 310 16,423 39, 940 237, 402 55,411 217,293 67, 015 6,678 31,852 88,338 1,405 7,486 4,609 3,478 2,145 99 57, 479 4,794 5,792 2,094 18, 672 1,118 3,024 604 3,506 76 855 527 356 56 210 12, 344 18,075 54 547 14,041 410 4,787 79 569 3,733 15, 156 43, 513 2,403 19,677 40 5,789 27, 677 5,849 168 837 34,724 10, 610 ' 10, 201 280 731 75, 257 5,117 28,043 939 936 1,607 5,948 5,100 339 624, 717 729, 710 34,335 115, 482 283,610 313, 809 169, 557 752, 530 197, 460 71, 371 449, 211 275, 525 143, 808 231, 892 122, 749 142,122 427, 805 57, 975 291, 830 248, 210 69, 847 271, 339 650, 752 130, 231 199, 080 373, 929 366, 130 252, 205 44, 310 66, 619 442, 191 199, 313 354, 622 124, 133 116, 025 445, 527 263, 225 717, 450 131, 425 121, 510 210, 287 367, 587 285„770 184, 785 126, 944 296, 255 276, 744 177, 144 231, 479 136, 127 225, 970 533, 012 375, 090 61, 346 286, 618 535,863 320, 946 357, 285 235, 840 28,537 340, 865 219, 377 366, 200 215, 273 16, 975 54,624 100, 763 120, 047 109, 363 191, 379 29,680 26, 608 334, 767 76, 176 7,994 106, 539 17, 695 64,984 88,043 9,126 178, 132 18, 717 6,423 152, 810 84, 165 76, 056 40, 341 194, 148 101, 138 53, 205 6,150 32, 230 60, 074 113, 937 83,223 6,765 20, 340 18, 966 155, 409 178, 906 28,433 84, 985 97,586 227, 799 85,241 46, 101 11, 800 30, 607 124,228 101, 503 112, 055 25,094 17,424 229, 790 49, 259 46, 716 20, 200 168, 061 37, 501 83,247 82, 343 13,540 27, 765 11,878 700 701 80 40 50 125 5, 429, 395, 88, 340 4, 211, 036 2, 847, 209 1, 777, 355 40, 727 596 3,575 4, 213, 088 18, 729 875, 459 15, 534 4, 982,052 2,365 4, 777, pflO 6S','578 7,882 3, 505, 6S0 3,514,413 24,542 37, 930 5,666,620 1, 399, 568 1,000 26,229 32, 922 179, 805 4, 627, 531 3, 854,"812 7, 025 94, 000 64, 139 29, 100 271,232 127, 713 375, 065 2,583,543 2, 643, 454 832 99, 592 61, 104 6,370 2,900,553 50,842 3,000 790, 560 685,363 8,544,532 75 1,450 2, 428, 978 11,715 671,380 2, 588, 189 6,227 74, 691 12 400 174 io 6 4,600 1,469 8,227 40, 25S 420 4,095 12, 075 7,525 10, 397 35, 810 25,024 12, 015 21, 764 36, 508 6,040 12,184 9,084 112, 774 12, 062 3,359 18, 086 9,302 4,946 15, 181 13, 960 14, 004 4,169 17, 046 8,607 31, 248 3,098 6,862 54,992 10, 459 8,738 8,974 3,059 11, 758 14, 391 102,257 12, 676 15, 334 7,349 16,267 37, 936 14, 375 8,755 1,102 11, 530 26, 511 36, 509 4,816 4,242 22, 307 48, 973 60, 214 30, 297 15, 449 30, 551 3,574 6,285 19, 361 5,953 14, 718 3,417 3,263 238 484 3,936 2,581 4,249 2,642 726 529 13, 700 2,108 925 1,347 173 4,895 1,011 4,320 596 1,081 4,363 3,794 484 102 6,826 3,913 31 676 16 1,038 1,108 3,623 148 7,635 4,693 1,013 2,118 182 320 1,381 1,418 281 121 1,166 6,633 1,502 914 25 1,097 6,160 9,394 21 8 1,298 7,124 2 1,943 2,633 191 36, 645 2,449 23, 593 23, 822 14, 597 10, 493 7,236 27, 536 11, 834 43, 766 17,356 10, 938 39, 063 18, 962 10, 620 16, 093 8,300 20, 488 8,668 3,082 16, 099 11, 119 6,088 18, 685 10, 961 10, 022 3,689 10, 307 12, 867 16, 370 4,269 3,940 19, 315 6,112 13, 008 13, 734 9,740 7,337 54,383 38, 746 10, 233 11, 297 9,667 27, 056 29, 890 8,244 7,836 7,733 6,563 12, 919 24, 858 7,080 4,607 13, 671 41,773 26, 002 18, 534 17, 219 15, 357 34, 694 13, 861 8,408 16, 641 32, 630 233,309 13, 136 262 279 9,416 11, 599 10,023 1,361 643 40 25, 270 5,723 3,039 1,506 533 44, 053 1,748 13, 223 3,200 560 13, 035 22, 610 1,519 5,659 17, 429 18, 945 932 365 3,171 8,073 26, 999 83 30, 820 12, 269 1,788 1,700 2,270 271 13, 070 12, 146 556 669 1,519 17, 495 6,688 249 83 3,470 30, 211 38, 352 563 74 79, 627 380 21, 725 14, 063 98,040 562 156 STATE OF VIRGINIA. AGRICULTUKE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. t M n > o 3 Accomack Albemarle Alexandra Alleghany Amelia Amherst Appomattox... AugaEta Barbour Bath Bedford Berkeley Boone Botetourt Braxton Brooke Brunswick Buchanan Buckingham. . . Cabell Calhoun Campbell Caroline Carroll Charles City... Charlotte Chesterfield Clarke Clay Craig Culpeper Cumberland . . . Dinwiddle Doddridge Elizabeth City. Essex Fairfax Fauquier Fayette Floyd Fluvanna Franklin Frederick Giles Gilmer Gloucester Goochland Grayson Greenbrier Greene Greenville Halifax Hampshire Hancock Hardy Hanover Harriaoq Henrico i Henry Highland Me of Wight... Jackson 15 182 819 38 30 477 9 656 25 21,964 10 701 66 7,030 14, 733 6,098 1,247 1,074 145 511 543 3,910 35 25 560 84 155 178 10 3 199 247 70 30 11,977 200 4 358 538 6 100 5,900 320 176 4,304 49 74 2,816 3 8,310 771 2,947 8,990 6 382 5,681 2,939 1,157 13, 463 12, 380 509 3 24, 118 13, 422 6,214 99 6,563 69 200 14, 500 $16, 435 16, 686 1,915 3,225 320 8,052 4,062 15,229 4,230 2,728 26, 452 4,531 7,003 3,083 8,497 4,595 215 571 12,125 1,895 2,930 852 4,830 904 1,205 335 5,736 575 3,145 25 4,210 756 6,715 2,287 5,473 5,191 17, 2.57 7,518 3,477 2,946 3,075 16, 374 420 676 6,729 15, 563 9,411 6,220 825 6,817 3,895 6,019 44 2,731 32, 145 9,281 431 44 85 408 1,037 1,168 12 2,207 221 5 352 205 20 602 736 9 1,351 4,763 817 271 92 1,155 30 293 94 550 64 24 2 549 83 22 5,036 894 195 85 271 5 1,524 767 30 $100 787 28,970 227 9,242 180 890 140 600 15 22 1,615 234 7,320 45 75 643 10, 244 38 195 4,903 155 5,795 700 12, 605 667 110 124 1,289 100 1,227 130 2,361 350 2,430 300 50 52, 645 57 80, 280 2,875 21 45, 158 206, 728 10, 375 44, 745 59, 743 112, 779 79, 897 451, 305 161, 627 44, 345 347, Oil 160, 069 59, 262 135, 030 43,772 140. 326 68,329 32, 510 92, 577 45,230 61, 050 107, 884 82,249 80, 390 31, 170 80, 385 68,073 67, 905 27, 863 31, 544 107, 270 54,250 63, 764 66, 554 29, 640 33, 837 163, 166 284, 005 82, 082 85, 676 76, 336 158, 337 215, 758 64, 767 77,274 41, 465 61,479 93, 350 151, 156 50, 355 18, 053 143, 795 239, 360 125, 446 102, 603 104. 327 155, 419 68, 326 88, 801 90, 383 25, 722 111, 506 468 15, 103 8,543 484 1,150 952 12 3,069 175 3,564 219 22 6,328 15 190 1,251 523 800 3,510 4,315 50 4,798 846 5,584 3,561 587 400 3,904 8,151 3,565 692 2,336 15, 400 50 6,628 1,815 1,209 323 1,870 461 21, 687 6,817 2,015 6,297 8,031 74 4,603 795 5,445 6,387 11 1,015 969 935 1,729 3,233 2,629 809 33 160 14 8,342 42 51 578 2,439 1,082 8 33 56 86 107 367 491 3,126 17 1,969 4,765 159 349 2,624 630 145 8,088 11, 756 938 2,767 590 2,798 7,777 1,816 2,495 2,568 1,769 3,157 5,718 1,033 11 104 11, 366 3,402 4,688 2,167 11, 734 2,109 1 4,529 852 1,746 253 951 58 296 11 60 58 365 911 182 10 134 51 173 1,370 343 435 238 2,942 244 121 2,946 522 1,101 50 298 10 18 98 33 18 880 61 350 383 834 114 17 224 1,61 274 469 19 200 4,419 1,036 518 98 27 48 539 107 195 935 250 358 11 762 10 21 252 STATE OF VIliGINIA. 167 AGRIOULTUEE. PRODUCED. > •a t ■a a < HEMP. o g o Pi i O 1 1 S CO -a p« 1° 1 to o s 1 Cm O u o §) ^ p o ■a 1 ^ 1 m 1! t O § o 1 o 1 h 2 1 ! 2,691 5,255 127 416 50 252 897 6,654 19, 417 260 3,545 5,983 10, 751 8,462 17, 116 1,820 5,944 55, 962 1,380 67,342 13, 229 6,120 4,849 7,010 24,026 10, 724 5,957 7,142 11, 066 3,041 16, 112 50 14, 338 1,129 9,695 6,594 4,200 8,545 1,506 3,968 1,393 625 2,297 2,557 42, 193 19, 311 8,145 8,309 50, 415 22, 012 7,688 3.791 2,530 5,449 5,690 12,508 3,585 2,835 29, 733 13, 240 6,851 6,994 2,733 11, 473 1,935 40, 958 6,311 5,315 2,155 $2,169 19, 490 $154, 780 267, 222 5,035 40,660 77, 712 113, 351 77, 140 254, 383 53, 452 37, 716 260, 058 93, 555 30,879 108,333 20, 327 36, 763 136, 857 15, 501 127, 021 49, 736 13, 455 124, 639 107,750 55, 269 32, 347 135, 023 70, 567 70, 913 12, 597 29, 841 114, 849 81, 191 97, 762 24, 848 39, 767 66, 540 68, 491 230, 192 44,107 58,633 82, 686 164, 530 96,524 66, 180 21, 167 70, 321 77,718 76,259 114, 265 49, 942 69,495 257, 810 109, 834 26, 396 71, 609 122, 116 75, 883 115, 479 107, 290 25, 592 135, 052 40,260 1 725 4,300 280 25 776 ^ 1,923 40 466 4,916 4,528 9,717 5,139 9,487 202 3 21 202 408 205 128 1,392 5,298 514 174 588 1,120 820 843 41 368 5,497 430 1,575 675 444 42 770 2,248 1,153 240 275 1,054 148 1,419 4,550 5,193 5,736 46, 122 16, 024 16, 264 7,523 29,226 4 72 180 Ci 2 7 585 49, 036 4,093 5,915 7,949 312 R 2 256 45 n 12 40 in 165 11 1" 3,865 5,934 6,629 10 320 3,749 3,204 1,400 4,076 5,669 114 390 245 2,558 3,038 200 6,541 1,782 8,358 5,236 7,652 n 500 14 25 11, 134 2,404 T> 250 16 4 137 108 60 99 361 12, 745 5,141 12, 534 4,518 6,058 28, 451 12, 291 17, 013 100 12,919 4,277 17 2,344 70 233 18 60 19 3,035 6,901 5,958 451 20 317 4,635 90 91 oo "3 11, 453 898 4 138 "4 "n 18 3,435 171 1,061 27 435 345 381 321 149 330 99 "6 "7 8 2,556 101 ^8 2,503 5,733 3,035 1,690 18 485 253 14 1,896 3,936 67 427 171 5,325 10, 502 5,071 8,586 5,123 4,971 oq in 50 206 6 11 io 216 47 15 10, 521 33 5,300 132 1,623 34 35 2 2 109 227 1,338 6 2,135 89 344 103 273 99 1,358 1,090 652 141 4,901 1,172 644 258 132 483 681 736 300 352 2,958 504 10 68 210 196 31 3,547 184 1,083 6 12,554 834 9,311 13, 787 16, 505 5,370 30, 736 4,203 11,961 8 ■'17 5,695 3,678 28,492 25, 643 6,129 6,433 57, 970 22, 756 36 50 37 2,000 5,740 3,005 11, 366 401 17,211 819 4,775 4,889 70 503 7,124 20 550 614 8,431 39 150 40 4 33 175 4,929 12,669 73 39 427 465 135 /|0 480 678 11, 63j 43 44 4=i 46 200 9,088 5,419 2,306 2 681 151 360 47 144 50 48 72, 650 4,001 41 580 50 51 4,433 2,301 800 3,337 107 115 5 225 1 >io 4,410 764 31, 653 280 466 1,660 295 .■iS 54 10,256 5,684 7,889 1,042 15, 537 8,009 6,378 8,908 55 56 195 2,433 162 13, 195 880 10, 895 57 58 3,303 7,466 330 5,478 446 77 3 110 ,59 45, 024 2,189 57 60 61 4,903 115 14,316 02 158 STATE OF VIEGINIA. AGRICULTURE, COUNTIES. ACRES OP LAND. n I P4 LIVE STOCK. ■d O James City Jefferson Kanawha King George King and Queen . King William Lancaster Lee Lewis Logan London Louisa Lunenburg McDowell Madison Marion Marshall Mason Matthews Mecklenburg Mercer Middlesex Monongalia Monroe Montgomery Morgan Nansemond Nelson New Kent Nicholas Norfolk Northampton Northumberland. . Nottoway Ohio Orange Page Patrick Pendleton Pittsylvania Pleasants Pocahontas Powhatan Preston Prince Edward . . . Prince G-eorge — Prince William . - . Princess Anne — Pulaski Putnam Baleigh Randolph Rappahannock . . . Richmond Ritchie Roane Roanoke Rockbridge Rockingham Russell Scott Shenandoah 25, 003 83, 735 37, 686 70, 753 108, 107 99, 674 34, 925 73, 405 42, 613 17, 367 220, 266 156, 950 110, 935 4,641 97, 421 81, 096 59, 136 37, 925 29, 594 139, 840 48, 718 36, 624 92, 048 106, 295 72, 939 27, 147 59, 708 118, 036 46, 310 34, 941 47,^85 56, 402 54, 459 67, 775 37, 487 107, 743 53, 431 58, 064 81, 184 247, 156 15, 809 74, 619 68, 516 92, 663 108, 536 63, 777 97, 353 57, 612 59, 003 31, 239 11, 632 48, 249 103, 880 52, 094 38, 227 19, 767 58, 306 139, 236 20O, 803 93, 066 73, 693 76,641 52,715 24, 348 170, 063 42, 743 76,925 64, 239 38, 742 170, 192 69, 731 220, 888 75, 876 133, 889 142, 546 64, 739 115, 801 93, 637 62, 543 66, 315 19, 838 202, 643 237, 774 31, 655 86, 310 185, 669 113, 260 48, 116 112, 750 152, 948 66, 965 1, 425, 387 fV 81, 794 40, 065 53, 390 88, 800 17,353 68, 993 63, 600 168, 899 220, 642 332, 882 36, 798 754, 302 75, 213 195, 351 106, 151 83, 809 76, 746 75, 140 114, 446 89, 789 105, 313 278, 083 46, 768 43, 630 165, 372 105, 808 133, 079 200, 886 145, 165 119, 117 226, 155 86,910 $1, on, 340 5, 652, 143 1, 895, 918 1, 933, 469 2, 454, 708 2, 568, 250 1, 307, 441 2, 768, 021 1, 327, 743 558, 443 10, 508, 211 4, 461, 836 2, 232, 979 100, 655 2, 816, 620 3,H5,337 2, 489, 909 1, 951, 283 1, 450, 460 3, 606, 956 1, 540, 185 1, 145, 060 2, 884, 916 3, 768, 775 3, 063, 680 479, 987 1, 680, 310 4, 009, 504 1, 331, 275 3, 607, 359 ' 2,140,252 2, 184, 150 1, 701, 047 1, 729, 186 2, 423, 520 3, 779, 299 2, 192, 549 1, 378, 805 1, 606, 532 5, 760, 940 649, 220 2, 051, 780 2, 100, 284 2, 257, 314 2, 957, 131 1, 947, 415 2, 373, 100 1, 860, 486 2, 337, 230 1, 266, 592 414, 673 1,628,295 2, 860, 410 1, 270, 037 1, 500, 626 531, 703 2, 323, 226 5, 785, 123 9, 718, 613 2, 324, 483 2, 085, 732 4,035,355 $38, 609 119, 176 34, 246 56, 531 57, 015 80, 172 60, 143 42, 785 23,582 9,790 238, 264 108, 245 62, 961 2,088 91, 377 55, 057 58,252 37, 761 34, 214 99, 175 33,844 31, 603 59, 257 73, 807 67, 537 27, 931 42, 312 80, 798 55, 403 43, 651 40, 836 47, 720 58, 624 47, 567 50, 640 104, 266 80, 420 23,296 47, 838 131, 565 12, 752 39, 937 70, 369 100, 929 61, 744 74, 674 63, 366 40, 880 42,154 33, 717 9,354 20,880 66, 023 32, 889 31, 083 12, 179 61, 690 109,233 363, 506 46, 806 49, 095 99,133 358 3,421 1,402 921 1,088 1,089 641 3,167 1,617 885 7,503 3, 485 1,907 222 3,385 3,762 2,413 1,355 584 2,718 1,552 507 3,904 3,216 2,161 972 1,429 2,505 646 1,358 1,466 1,299 833 978 1,441 2,493 3,353 1,214 2,543 4,285 646 1,688 1,105 3,326 1,456 .590 2,190 1,667 1,430 1,239 486 1,189 2,593 770 1,724 783 1,490 4,381 7,874 2,726 3,335 3,526 338 128 153 616 545 879 260 312 12 23 105 1,037 396 8 76 54 2 75 153 783 37 224 33 47 66 6 303 372 458 53 314 306 336 341 3 325 19 285 I 864 1 53 724 41 533 763 93 207 31 114 5 17 117 233 36 26 174 298 11 364 170 636 2,316 1,889 1,268 1,880 1,639 803 3,327 1,903 1,595 5,809 3,050 2,315 573 2,623 4,629 2,501 1,254 838 3,230 2,318 916 3,881 3,058 2,406 1,036 1,641 2,776 1,174 1,728 2,084 1,325 1,580 1,228 1,408 2,071 1,700 1,988 3,423 5,401 725 2,447 1,448 4,993 1,938 1,150 2,259 1,448 1,611 1,507 744 1,760 3,189 1,176 2,117 1,011 1,544 4,046 6,011 3,832 3,852 2,071 394 135 1,047 1,035 1,966 1,182 818 914 364 827 571 2,058 1,197 25 545 654 573 616 839 1,421 199 737 680 407 431 16 571 1,283 560 505 274 584 1,567 881 346 1,199 73 573 11 1,814 211 246 812 591 1,103 557 502 202 311 934 128 337 422 1,359 393 247 318 279 50 538 807 31 1,284 4,071 3,282 1,702 2,502 2,302 1,897 5,008 5,452 3,513 14, 504 4,377 3,845 785 3,906 5,680 3,113 3,266 1,249 6,388 4,138 1,060 7,090 9,181 5,429 1,709 3,718 3,141 1,442 4,523 4,721 2,536 1,999 2,248 1,380 4,393 3,176 2,930 6,373 8,348 1,300 5,471 2,243 5,846 2,807 1,308 3,596 ■6,808 3,887 3,891 1,311 6,106 7,234 1,820 3,409 1,625 2,965 9,227 13,299 8,839 4,854 4, 340 6G8 7,269 4,936 2,678 4,320 5,493 1,373 10, 422 8,230 4,673 10, 625 7,674 6,546 866 4,893 9,029 10,022 5,582 1,134 10, 034 10, 225 2,176 10, 945 12, 288 8,152 2,992 2,398 5,321 1, 763 9,093 1,270 2,9 3,130 2,936 40, 050 8,739 3,472 3,8 14,143 11, 611 2,837 10, 338 5,425 19,084 5,195 1,379 7,001 4,054 4,647 5,924 3,569 7,565 6,679 2,149 7,925 5,190 3,977 10, 298 13,354 13, 357 13,854 3,742 STATE OF VIRGINIA. 159 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PEODUCED. a •a a S ■a o •s S s o "3 4,794 15,044 10, 135 5,257 9,036 8,686 5,873 29,688 4,554 9,197 23,153 16, 259 12,228 2,463 13, 767 9,985 8,447 8,294 6,708 20, 550 11, 308 4,497 8,028 10, 172 14, 224 3,300 27,520 17,002 6,970 12, 390 16,038 10,335 8,648 8,207 3,244 11,804 10,083 13,522 5,744 22,386 2,386 5,099 8,051 8,854 7,613 8,680 7,937 18,295 8,878 8,084 3,663 3,267 10,623 8,064 7,891 4,380 8,021 18, 762 37, 307 17, 989 27,450 8,905 $125, 593 466, 168 197, 224 203, 691 252,349 232,290 131,475 447, 142 225, 500 161, 490 1, 182, 355 , 556,856 360, 642 33, 785 321, 897 466,254 280, 860 252,063 127, 970 481, 24ff 244, 954 110, 887 454, 070 500, 268 378, 313 111, 439 244, 452 352, 344 170, 821 334, 820 251, 378 208, 875 199, 833 215,527 253, 090 448, 384 288,509 202, 808 371,228 700, 695 84,275 328,002 273, 279 461, 133 297, 433 228, 861 318, 445 290, 847 288, 451 185, 995 69, 038 244,857 407, 815 148,261 213, 147 86, 180 254, 689 652, 399 1, 139, 690 496,824 425,210 366, 153 57,830 422, 514 76,305 116,609 107,357 148, 094 80,862 49, 993 27,191 11,025 396,297 258,265 86,332 1,041 99, 639 50, 894 74, 759 108, 839 46,677 161, 825 43, 131 59, 939 49,124 84,805 118, 271 19,404 15,022 78, 306 63, 592 12,894 5,924 39, 886 92, 441 92, 213 20, 048 186,022 102, 149 19,571 11, 475 184, 112 22, 785 8,774 111, 841 8,933 79, 521 133, 294 54,069 23,147 69, 676 78, 796 6,700 7,675 89,275 89, 167 27,582 21,897 175, 043 193, 338 358, 653 56,058 62,337 ] 72, 292 15, 198 198 6,723 2,057 2,677 90 4,540 579 530 28,946 213 340 285 19,662 1,159 2,830 330 8 165 5,021 140 4,999 13, 422 5,956 16, 082 125 7,932 87 6,128 425 50 509 5,639 3,538 27,438 10,788 11,927 3,465 319 9,787 10,778 15 11,403 4,894 43 1,825 2,126 28,649 2,222 369 705 3,133 18,889 45,362 10,287 5,172 10, 635 119, 460 358, 267 274, 943 307,660 425,423 400,680 179, 805 582, 648 136, 677 199, 385 931, 465 383, 683 294, 520 20,445 363, 360 214, 706 241, 911 264, 813 167, 813 461, 290 131, 654 163, 467 239, 024 216, 513 256, 735 47, 575 411, 975 339, 075 198, 350 103, 193 454, 116 377, 205 245, 982 218, 207 138,430 312,897 175, 168 185,202 122, 997 519, 374 102, 172 48,229 280, 611 71, 063 233, 833 305, 135 188, 270 369, 070 202,910 197, 700 39, 301 56,225 299, 356 225,265 147, 785 100, 074 152, 803 423, 952 684,239 327, 197 512,829 195, 778 18, 573 54,798 45, 430 27, 675 14, 221 20,736 11,623 97, 991 12, 418 11,067 188, 717 165, 111 132, 631 2,215 44, 110 86,409 133, 617 6,462 24,060 172, 633 55, 843 7,046 126, 198 59,265 87, 992 10,122 26, 065 91, 646 23,367 26, 613 20, 746 222,995 15, 909 58,472 82, 101 69,569 21,384 55,745 16, 516 259, 053 7,395 26, 612 134,335 104, 317 122, 126 32,037 96,489 54,247 30, 930 16, 355 11, 713 20,248 45, 069 7,133 14, 978 8,743 81, 813 138, 298 128, 010 100,809 93,182 45,289 10 190 40 100 20 225 655 85 2,030 6,700 338, 264 53, 660 209, 819 397, 403 6,380 38, 162 82, 910 13,545 4, 798^.087 4, 272, 081 1,275 480, 475 25, 012 10, 590 21, 996 1,076 6, 631, 850 182; 654 21, 950 1,380 132,019 727, 995 2,234 400 2, 833, 618 54, 030 14, 470 100 7,527 3,125,450 1, 177, 702 47, 138 655, 454 2,073 7, 053,.962 27,930 190 2, 886, 611 185 4,231,797 565, 090 12, 921 141, 662 406,992 34,827 1,117 38,280 500 18, 606 10,268 935, 341 456,556 153, 304 7,805 16,773 4 120 30 50 1,100 2,305 38, 561 8,200 10,168 11, 115 12, 096 3,757 19, 056 16,628 8,536 42, 580 10, 422 10, 653 1,297 14,644 22,922 27,385 11, 840 3,612 18, 380 18, 858 5,625 27,801 30, 784 16,232 5,931 3,018 12,272 ,4,359 15, 539 2,366 7,273 8,449 5,348 102, 032 23,459 12, 624 6,832 29,900 19,929 6,432 23,041 11, 952 47, 493 10, 152 4,010 24,327 7,730 15, 387 9,710 5,839 15, 375 23,338 4,065 17, 647 8,555 8,056 19,431 36, 294 30,421 22,107 13,755 668 156 297 678 6,069 9,796 1,272 9,607 114 1,004 4,262 6,955 25 2,475 1,078 772 73 5,863 6,678 2,789 1,363 41 475 1,762 249 49, 373 2,779 1,796 2,249 15, 662 1,185 593 2,205 144 1,320 274 767 2,250 5,351 190 2,651 107 3,919 1,782 432 18, 383 81 624 491 1,207 410 498 357 341 5 8,795 981 4,750 31, 876 12, 358 5,293 6,583 12, 925 7^50 10, 926 9,822 9,794 43, 953 14, 904 9,506 1,410 13, 758 12, 618 46, 634 11, 873 6,011 10, 633 10,533 5,530 10, 586 12, 692 18, 132 7,806 28,154 14, 773 8,392 16,528 102, 605 40, 214 8,725 3,494 21, 449 11,122 13, 378 15,454 13, 366 23,552 7,747 12,090 6,117 44, 655 7,700 8,727 14,445 38, 226 12, 898 9,192 3,719 8,349 15, 817 7,703 19, 490" 6,593 9,334 26,441 39, 269 15,540 13,494 11, 728 7,393 5,200 3,756 15, 114 13, 627 12, 408 9,470 473 6,997 180 17, 950 24, 989 904 8,776 882 692 527 20, 949 41, 874 395 11, 243 565 1,245 737 119 166, 091 9,451 16, 248 16, 450 94,847 82, 316 22, 136 6,916 823 5,539 2,383 9,106 56 37, 143 211 6,577 25 8,772 14, 447 1,043 53,127 255 2,063 339 30 2,062 10,834 728 722 1,121 1,568 5,731 8,270 10,276 2,431 160 STATE OF VIRGINIA. AGRIOULTUEE. COUNTIES. PEODUCBD. .5 James City Jefferaon Kauawha King George-.... King and Queen . King William Lancaster Lee Lewis Logan Loudon Louisa Lunenburg McDowell Madison Marion Marshall Mason Matthews Mecklenburg Mercer Middlesex Monongalia Monroe Montgomery Morgan Nansemond Nelson New Kent Nicholas Norfolk Northampton Northumberland . . Nottoway Ohio Orange Page Patrick Pendleton Pittsylvania Pleasants Pocahontas Powhatan Preston Prince Edward . . . Prince George Prince William . . . Princess Anne Pulaski Putnam Baleigh Kandolph Rappahannock . . . Richmond Ritchie Roane Roanoke Rockbridge Rockingham . . t . . . Russell Scott Shenandoah 617 618 120 25 161 62 2,072 357 87 21 1 1,114 1,242 50 23 225 18 60 402 3,219 24 3,917 80 1 104 3 9,651 15, 503 52 4,917 13, 798 7,302 3,388 2,465 25 1,757 9,940 160 125 4,372 8 1,917 1,161 18, 472 15 981 14,232 5 95, 357 1,970 1,084 50 2,972 8,511 3,494 5 5,081 532 487 2,199 3,667 1,053 1,178 610 1,305 2,047 205 100 595 1,223 8,028 2,812 3,882 3,823 1,890 100 4,945 11,703 17, 320 6,739 4,573 8,155 555 9,376 3,587 5,000 3,238 10, 204 3,721 2,221 5,516 11, 508 742 1,019 10 10, 174 15, 668 1,932 5,074 5,868 95 1,351 40 1,583 1,800 1,493 5,253 754 9,519 1,039 431 6,386 109 2,880 2,380 628 13, 782 16, 351 16, 494 11, 295 553 45 204 390 36 27 91 1,777 945 294 5 30 704 23 66 1,397 106 18 130 33 72 64 311 90 574 1 1,000 180 860 150 137 330 3,840 91 20 103 20 800 270 1,935 243 1,465 13, 733 292, 968 25 870 45 7,325 5,575 30 104 81 150 21,163 131, 684 59, 196 31, 335 43, 303 48, 331 21, 342 100, 995 66, 230 48,247 425, 117 93, 860 75, 559 6,407 78, 829 226, 852 146, 715 67, 337 25, 603 97, 310 81, 454 25, 755 171, 876 112, 753 95, 725 61, 152 29, 760 98,807 44, 637 110, 453 36, 737 26, 140 29,248 22,546 128, 448 88, 195 86, 918 62, 155 101, 838 192, 392 30, 500 121, 310 43, 950 340, 988 67,288 36, 685 96, 535 27, 373 70, 652 81, 940 22,644 57, 332 77, 665 26, 439 92, 337 44, 116 54, 071 199, 756 427, 593 135, 940 87,723 134,827 255 7,272 3,185 60 2,327 70 65 8,293 978 200 2,967 6,116 8,512 5,248 439 60 5,247 770 2,650 3,604 2 6,225 9,142 700 40 4,574 264 2,030 647 153 265 473 4,603 6,485 8,588 1,217 600 1,165 6,259 1,842 5,096 2,324 252 24 2,081 16 891 4,416 111 12,835 12, 427 31 2 2,562 6,059 3,363 1,942 598 1,677 2,531 3 6,353 4,992 3,808 1,576 58 1,893 309 2,035 3,198 464 57 6,479 2,380 4,104 278 4,165 471 796 3,800 4,208 5,308 151 3,529 4,239 1,740 3,233 997 569 5,590 3,849 2,111 3,580 1,072 3,097 9,638 19, 174 1,466 1,025 6,455 40 3 577 13 20 20 315 5 11 15 335 343 252 5 161 239 1,497 12 10 2 10 2 57 159 25 100 433 2,363 4,716 139 55 1,110 78 253 4 1,167 63 160 2 606 454 290 47 160 269 347 1,011 925 60 25 225 25 433 27 25 247 499 419 61 33 33 12 79 31 108 600 6 1,112 62 no 25 300 135 180 213 2,227 2,518 1,040 542 1,819 31 15 15 5 73 474 1,135 207 14 7 5 32 64 34 111 30 121 167 192 3 51 10 144 198 50 10 229 73 18 18 57 123 27 79 95 189 5 3 STATE OF VIRGINIA. 16] AGRICULTURE, PRODUCED. o ■a > i •a si HEMP. I o •a- 1 Pi o ° M s 1 a '^ t it i • 1*8 1 Pi ■o en n g-3 S > Ms •o- S ^ g ° 1 a 1 1 1-^ 5 5 96 2,056 7,396 1,781 8 2,025 685 23,324 6,205 42,987 26,993 11, 614 9,296 10, 240 3,430 7,709 10, 648 897 3,182 11,920 8,964 40 8,271 11, 348 6,883 3,646 6,615 4,210 1,530 1,369 6,433 410 2,034 2,770 7,339 4,394 5,173 49,916 8,444 78, 844 1,711 866 5,380 15,474 1,492 1,035 13, 053 2,831 3,536 2,675 11, 797 1,370 5,759 2,392 3,473 7,861 4,716 10, 092 9,827 29, 693 36, 957 340 $1,196 7,825 1,382 2,350 12, 658 11, 700 10,714 17, 986 10, 142 12, 474 4,258 10,176 20, 168 2,862 12,122 14, 179 7,602 3,670 5,350 24, 427 30, 885 3,212 13,290 20, 335 8,248 2,190 5,853 6,016 1,875 24,543 1,315 1,798 5,264 5,241 $30,024 110, 221 56, 345 40,214 71, 575 70, 225 43, 115 96, 396 28, 817 30, 559 202, 746 130, 827 88, 920 8,138 113, 843 55, 990 44, 944 55, 706 58. 164 144, 805 58, 132 41, 654 46, 994 78, 506 96, 872 21,325 150, 185 126, 182 31, 365 64, 227 97, 299 86, 525 68, 792 50, 313 26, 930 97, 468 71, 447 69, 996 45, 319 223, 732 15,284 41, 554 69, 105 80, 407 69,241 53, 799 62, 089 106,255 83,230 57. 165 13,363 24, 883 86,409 49, 427 35, 763 20, 571 59, 857 168, 764 260, 691 89, 264 101, 055 83,204 fir 6^ 605 44 3,522 60 10 6 185. 8 1,434 310 3,004 1,369 1,028 844 584 320 213 495 K (If (;- 52 w fl' 140- 10,440 3,986 8,088 250 1,460 340 1,970 3,081 7,722 302 309 616 690 79 44 20 22 56 578 675 8 8 25 9 11, 176 11,365 3,839 10 7,369 639 1,071 80 10,532 4,307 1,141 115 7f 7 125 16 7' 7: 7^ 7; 701 46 65 1,958 1,123 195 58 7f 5,383 146 7" 20 19, 520 5,507 732 13, 954 1,758 967 7f 7'- 8( 124 1,500 13 8 380 10,236 14 370 R-' 21,009 3,033 pr 84 5, 998 7,117 8,153 1,033 50 140 229 416 437 33 2 12 32,608 46, 617 1,678 1,140 1,812 2,885 206 146 7,722 916 175 24 111 754 396 148 930 168 99 1,318 1,052 32 68 265 71 423 394 3,799 648 5,721 81 705 417 322 133 172 451 465 78 127 1,002 77 231 108 99 650 378 499 854 1,996 1,690 7 K so 25 30 85 Hf 2 R- Rf Rf 9f 9- 801 16, 187 425 901 56 31 21,664 4,315 95 93 (14 10 W flf 260 501 279 t)7 57 2,645 8,022 4,396 4,049 955 1,684 2,105 5,355 140 367 164 980 395 398 6,122 9,828 13, 644 14,614 33, 137 2,604 14, 846 8,426 20, 088 11, 452 2,560 2,863 4, 535 12, 372 36, 693 7,086 10, 594 7,109 3,443 9,550 6,305 1,900 53, 617 13, 973 29, 937 30, 386 6,676 9F 9,960 1,556 9fl 2,000 73 59, 590 25 3,342 lor 132 ini 60 nos 713 63,725 29 2,559 4,514 ion 52 55 471 1 Ifl"! 10 in.'^ 2 16,723 1,721 579 lOf 107 lOP 575 2,017 7,049 4,805 2,002 718 1,650 38 282 285 49 126 33 218 131 lOfl 2 im 230 54 2,804 734 111 2,114 3,072 43,692 445 99 1,351 us iia 114 20 53 115 116 262 5,420 4,652 1,550 3,115 10,292 23,028 11, 421 144 214 108 186 305 8:6 1,229 773 171 2 7,988 6,767 261 1,425 172 62,481 35,916 603 189 13, 615 8,193 70 1,816 10, 677 1,890 6,130 117 51 lie 4 2 30 UP 7 12f 20 T?l 2,188 441 482 12S i2r 262 124 21 1G2 STATE OF VIRGINIA. AGRICULTUEE. COUNTIES. ACRES or LAND. 63 .9 ^ a P4 LIVE STOCK. I •a 125 136 137 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 Smyth Southampton . Spottsylvania. Stafford Siirry Sussex ... Taylor Tazewell Tucker Tyler Upshur Warwick Warren Washington . - Wayne Webster Westmoreland Wetzel Wirt Wise Wood Wyoming Wythe York Total 67,528 131, 963 116, 007 62, 377 50, 306 126, 088 35, 147 65, 722 11, 101 39, 794 49, 170 12, 093 66, 489 110, 552 29, 521 5,732 76, 100 31, 332 19, 043 21, 181 46, 199 9,933 110, 879 28,030 145, 162 168, 708 117, 059 63,960 123, 932 134, 426 32, 900 273, 251 43, 559 97, 922 101, 626 25, 144 45, 165 140, 262 144, 839 120, 137 55, 415 124, 821 94, 124 175, 425 94, 229 69, 262 163, 234 39, 697 $2, 626, 469 1, 615, 065 2, 394, 424 1, 536, 580 1, 082, 056 1, 601, 905 1, 090, 010 2, 878, 107 279, 308 1, 500, 003 1,665,436 406, 250 2, 205, 979 4, 123, 333 893, 758 203, 723 1, 931, 680 1, 176, 511 579, 126 506, 618 1, 673, 864 234, 595 3, 793, 227 1, 167, 320 $45, 325 77,852 78, 794 46, 085 28, 597 71, 498 21, 937 56, 406 5,735 35, 696. 33, 161 &,486 44, 739 95, 392 18, 766 2,814 47, 030 20, 687 12, 042 13, 648 37, 868 7,143 91, 461 37, 505 2,459 1,612 1,687 1,380 629 1,210 1,137 2,976 448 1,484 1,955 230 -1,405 4,207 1,240 356 976 1,502 874 . 825 1,899 414 3,205 539 182 650 834 285 438 708 30 313 6 20 5 155 24 335 113 2 451 4 14 40 6 15 195 230 2,487 2,075 2,403 1,686 982 1,788 1,347 4,002 536 . 1/644 2,508 480 1,365 4,289 1,524 693 1,546 1,806 1,086 1,700 2,197 868 3,537 237 1,280 1,343 740 680 1,118 219 360 78 476 305 281 80 482 1,297 365 310 235 638 99 460 609 6,239 5,724 2,629 2,857 1,654 3,942 2,721 11, 291 1,337 2,829 4,690 896 4,406 6,790 2,642 972 2,023 3,056 1,589 2,020 2,706 2,365 7,939 2,062 9,632 5,9 4,156 3,9 1,6 3,8 4,7 11,138 2,651 8,748 9,821 . 475 5,229 14, 866 7,405 2,474 3,665 6,244 5,032 4,268 7,360 1,2:13 11, 824 1,271 11, 437, 821 19, 679, 215 371, 761, 661 9, 392, 296 287, 579 41, 015 330, 713 97, 872 615, 882 1, 043, 269 STATE OF VIRGINIA. 163 AGKIOULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PEODUCED. I I h) _ a a I S s ■s s 11,385 38,628 7,811 5,638 9,357 21, 608 3,710 13, 962 1,291 5,942 5,078 3,158 7,240 22,762 8,898 1,691 7,061 6,293 4,188 10,847 7,258 4,733 16, 198 5,670 $308, 951 374,105 313, 797 202, 073 152, 802 359, 821 162, 864 485, 525 58,850 202, 707 271,523 55,682 299, 090 569, 489 175,008 44,304 219, 364 169, 639 110, 417 123, 250 214, 077 81, 992 411, 815 124,627 92,782 12,287 132, 305 61, 919 36, 761 87, 359 20,811 44, 619 1,103 43,727 27,765 18,878 104, 776 119, 368 35, 319 1,586 125, 890 31, 652 27,488 11, 108 74,236 5,601 90, 485 38,334 4,542 4,532 955 3,957 180 898 7,525 1,147 283 1,719 3,723 362 791 1,097 1,529 202 2,717 244 962 21, 366 25 234,904 572, 995 255, 820 182, 105 201, 820 405, 979 78, 001 206, 320 19, 955 182,239 149, 496 67, 875 159, 099 664, 566 224,044 25, 602 342, 315 180, 150 115, 046 115, 925 227,223 62,420 301, 368 157, 421 99, 979 28,525 89, 265 54,464 27,123 03, 442 25,610 97, 421 6,049 28,512 20, 337 5,915 28, 181 156, 795 13,077 3,100 19, 091 26, 775 5,096 19,458 19, 158 9,515 117, 788 15,245 24,020 100 1, 626, 400 148,975 46, 875 592, 040 3,139 12, 470 710 11,225 50,000 140 2,563 60 1,014 12, 053 198, 490 55,628 33 100 1 70 180 38, 875 84, 989 44, 074 2,300 166, 365 4,778 43,644 71, 800 20, 198 8,596 9,747 10, 570 3,770 10,145 9,260 25,830 4,409 23,767 21, 010 1,506 17,227 30, 281 12, 016 3,982 7,315 11, 967 8,955 6,768 15, 753 3,295 30, 514 3,497 107, 355 206 1,313 6,415 18, 580 161 276 44 1,474 804 532 469 258 583 622 1,152 410 2,419 723 1,213 487 2,152 12,279 20,285 8,993 14, 085 7,450 13,886 4,294 9,973 4,346 23,733 13, 639 2,257 9,577 20,677 8,898 8,194 7,006 14, 430 8,769 5,893 33, 166 4,024 21, 687 4,657 138, 284 6,750 5,784 20,885 58, 503 539 5 653 455 10, 421 608 3,478 2,892 20 7,383 151 1,362 1,535 297 3,631 122 22,897 125 12B 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 1, 599, 919 47, 803,049 13, 130, 977 944, 330 38, 319, 999 10,186,720 8,225 123, 968, 312 12,727 2, 510, 019 515, 168 2,292,398 1,960,817 164 STATE OF VIRGINIA. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PEODUOIO). t 1 ■i •s 1 1 1 s 1 i 1* ■s i 1 f g 1 i .Q s ' s CO 1 125 Smyth 4,651 19 615 1,050 4 $8,477 61,642 10 733 12,577 20,311 2,686 88,285 13,267 51,775 62,581 10,915 43, 607 80, 357 100,720 17, 057 130, 527 126,350 11,425 90,410 161, 169 71,514 11,587 31,265 124,342 41,602 42,833 12, 175 22,855 163, 996 40,442 11,967 2,879 5,088 870 1,900 1,765 3,422 3,160 3,486 738 2,649 3,270 351 2,561 6,270 631 268 2,660 1,791 1,113 192 3,550 335 6,544 888 123 1,297 196 Soutbampton 563 2 197 Spottsylvania 18 5 5 75 $300 3,293 4 139 25 101 T>H Stafford 240 30 506 5 26 58 199 1,10 Sussex 310 111 Taylor 3,637 3,980 4,662 5,202 4,406 6,499 10, 920 757 4,218 14,060 18 70 249 524 27 144 353 110 132 Tazewell 329 1,^3 Tucker 520 11, 997 8,705 30 1,258 16, 374 4,526 134 Tyler 48 63 206 11 1 135 Upshur 136 Warwick 10 166 137 74 848 1,669 75 805 296 16 420 259 1,829 6,923 420 127 8 597 887 4 1,38 Washiugtmi 139 Wayne 20 3 140 Webster 563 141 Westmoreland 149 Wetzel 136 7,664 866 806 2,783 946 7,644 7,510 2,409 1,882 2,460 1,045 9,481 1,275 46 317 508 938 2 28 11 28 15 464 1 72 83 63 103 53 3,005 13 11 143 Wirt 144 Wise 16 68 4 145 Wood 1,535 38 698 996 146 Wyoming 3 272 180 9,008 3 259 147 Wythe 2,020 148 York Total 68,846 478,090 800, 650 40,808 589,467 13,464,722 280,852 445, 133 36 962 53,063 10,024 STATE OF VIRGINIA. 165 AGRICULTURE. PKODUOKD. o o" bo s •3 ■a < HEMP. ■s 1 1^ P 1 1 ° § U) o g p. i "3 If " O Q i il i t CO O 1 ■s 1 1° to' f = ! if 5,578 41 584 16, 110 1,261 1,727 400 220 66 125 250 689 110 322 97 171 64 515 732 1,839 295 351 8,856 1,885 2,905 2,900 1,919 4,820 5,086 11,380 2,483 6,014 4,893 5,075 15, 318 27,120 10, 171 4,777 $12, 560 8,084 5,439 2,286 1,177 17, 816 5,494 26,003 3,217 10,354 17,545 700 4,552 27,341 11, 697 3,257 $61,538 258,363 66,267 53, 134 49, 860 130, 560 22,383 74,772 7,721 35, 150 35,217 19, 645 49,132 145,224 40,241 6,439 43, 643 28,182 22,749 33, 186 51, 682 14, 740 124, 374 34,849 125 126 30 127 100 8 198 129 130 1,951 8,922 1,955 4,878 10, 426 81 582 82 175 319 8,752 37,991 10,062 4,820 18,639 952 2,708 501 378 1,510 1,980 1,988 48 11, 900 4,319 131 132 133 134 175 135 • 136 1,586 8,333 4,620 1,552 62 632 110 25 230 745 46 349 137 20,019 3,288 7,138 4,339 10, 134 219 138 1,000 139 140 141 6,858 1,635 7,455 360 4,561 13, 112 357 144 286 4 1 1 10, 557 4,887 3,470 100 3,590 13,707 1,053 103 160 10 669 673 6,270 12,584 2,164 7,266 236 158 1,215 225 1,601 338 5,507 2,828 13,374 690 19, 064 7,934 7,556 6,049 10, 020 0,366 6, 275 20,038 1,890 142 10 70 143 144 145 253 2,597 146 4 20 50 637 147 148 13,232 8,150 9,588 487,808 32,691 225 938,103 99,605 221,270 94,860 1,431,591 1, 576, 627 11,491,027 1G6 STATE OF WISCONSIN, AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. Adams , Ashland Bad Ax , Brown Buffalo Burnette" — Calumet Chippewa — Clark Columbia Crawford Dallas* Dane Dodge Door Douglas Dunn Eau Claire . .". Fond du Lac . Grant Green Green Lake . . Iowa Jackson Jefferson Juneau Kenosha Kewaunee La Crosse Lafayette La Pointe Manitowoc . . . Marathon Marquette Milwaukee . . . Monroe Oconto Outagamie . . . Ozaukee Pepin Pierce Polk Portage Racine Richland Rock Saiut Croix... Sauk Shawano Sheboygan . . . Trempeleau . . "Walworth "Washington - . "Waukesha "Waupaca , "Waushara "Winnebago "Wood , ACRES OF LAND. 47, 404 625 39, 066 10, 149 13, 262 27, 744 4,312 2,173 185, 548 9,731 43, 442 14, 016 108, 046 25,074 43, 695 63, 279 6,412 17, 224 152, 859 31,322 $754, 940 140, 350 1, 295, 153 305, 104 448, 536 970, 555 93, 650 107, 015 5, 663, 789 378, 8^9 11 Ph $43, 211 1,585 66, 729 18, 378 20, 574 55, 722 3,656 4,621 248, 897 21, 202 LIVE STOCK. 604 ' 14 1,265 392 283 540 78 31 5,159 510 25 1,785 28 2,475 749 940 2,335 119 170 8,374 635 .g 1,226 24 1,731 504 2,045 106 188 3,983 370 1,692 28 3,524 873 1,184 2,525 189 241 10, 705 1,011 1,635 252 170 1,6 41 12 13,452 402 Total. 279, 124 235, 642 2,343 287 7,308 8,358 225, 299 163, 551 190, 229 85, 386 80, 618 15, 263 189, 611 24, 631 108, 113 23,758 31, 189 114, 620 293 26, 177 2,971 45, 009 65, 913 25,858 4,574 29, 523 63, 882 5,271 13, 969 3,159 23, 255 137, 161 33, 627 256, 309 19, 488 93,236 553 107, 8.33 11, 509 212, 898 115,022 165, 492 26,822 43, 455 86, 161 1,403 301, 566 184, 009 14, 566 3,125 20, 306 22,625 122, 217 238, 954 122, 639 72, 177 189, 722 38, 780 93, 266 61, 814 53,760 87, 705 68, 983 120, 908 1,689 40, 936 17, 395 102, 776 48, 712 58, 305 13, 188 63, 338 54, 213 20, 185 42, 929 9,623 56, 663 44, 569 102, 494 158, 567 49, 140 151, 472 1,835 117, 839 27, 130 89, 384 109, 379 159, 090 74, 947 92,247 108, 223 8,661 4, 147, 420 9, 423, 494 8, 589, 663 93, 152 35, 300 209, 330 288, 390 6, 803, 384 5, 001, 359 5, 061, 3.39 3, 216, 900 2, 808, 453 471, 490 5, 057, 531 697, 481 3, 475, 409 1, 014, 520 1, 641, 935 3, 304, 754 36, 600 801, 102 113, 040 1, 017, 305 6, 236, 295 1, 019, 155 103, 770 1, 355, 713 2, 370, 375 228, 780 533, 001 114, 890 689, 125 4, 297, 580 1, 456, 780 10, 909, 805 681, 973 3, 172, 138 29, 500 3, 805, 650 367, 240 6, 778, 235 3, 916, 598 7, 530, 996 1, 063, 226 1, 121, 040 3, 958, 617 56, 800 131, 117, 104 402,'566 362,819 3,081 685 11, 837 15j 926 268, 322 284, 991 241, 438 136, 065 173, 545 24,283 203, 997 36, 752 143, 726 47, 826 111, 922 192, 631 675 36,458 5,284 57, 008 151, 010 47, 576 4,727 51, 864 145, 790 10, 354 30, 505 5,290 33, 952 176, 689 74, 496 429, 607 34, 563 148, 187 1,630 207, 909 12, 516 254, 306 163, 001 257, 585 43, 714 57, 064 164,985 5,115 5, 758, S47 8,959 6,682 22 25 218 221 5,646 7,509 5,570 2,473 4,040 335 4,445 621 3,755 110 1,056 5,641 13 558 21 1,005 3,048 709 119 610 1,516 191 391 98 475 ■ 4, 367 1,405 9,431 485 2,672 26 2,040 392 7,287 2,683 5,943 526 900 3,022 43 116, 180 9 3 30 155 35 12 34 6 9 23 12 4 2 3 2 7 11 14 10 12 104 43 31 14, 319 13, 485 141 17 376 393 10, 383 8,530 8,254 4,507 5,957 708 8,616 1,484 6,213 1,134 2,138 6,580 6 1,198 221 3,437 5,365 1,509 140 2,352 4,842 306 786 204 1,167 6,966 2,332 11,397 938 5,156 43 7,539 771 8,988 7,375 9,289 1,698 I 2, 605 6,408 118 5,684 7,116 135 26 285 301 5,226 2,755 2,194 1,965 2,019 496 3,876 1,144 1,257 1,861 1,113 1,278 7 1,329 240 2,074 1,458 946 168 1,766 2,880 206 479 97 863 1,366 1,422 2,746 565 3,074 42 5,' 030 563 2,004 4,730 3,685 1,363 1,783 2,771 119 6,222 13, 588 152 32 779 367 12, 390 13, 829 10, 842 6,949 8,570 912 9,840 1,667 6,476 1,679 1,928 9,718 12 1,685 122 4,307 3,386 1,538 141 3,783 4,158 550. 688 184 1,194 6,941 2,681 13, 813 1,111 6,111 ■ 51 7,326 940 10, 362 7,682 8,493 1,740 3,254 6,857 185 17,748 23,872 19 4 80 10 23,409 8,305 10, 817 9,760 3,967 146 21, 027 951 20,656 15 442 4,112 5,674 4,483 790 S9 1,426 3,131 30 234 41 169 13,496 1,2 24,728 27 5,125 8,916 483 38, 659 9,087 36,046 651 2,602 11,082 93, 652 225, 207 332, 954 ^ No TL'turna. STATE OF WISCONSIN. 167 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PEODUCBD. ■s ° S " S 9 ■" 2,206 5 6,640 1,297 4,408 $125, 442 5,050 a'jl, 573 49, 025 109,282 81,489 150 179, 572 21, 475 76,267 24,220 12 1,040 5,137 1,785 50, 338 251 169, 879 8,105 51, 453 41, 003 855 228, 793 25,865 32, 571 6,006 370 475 3,256 4,507 90 472 324 141 1, 045' 2,110 215 27, 872 5,607 S9, 650 29, 462 60, 134 20 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 .01 55 56 57 58 4,857 509 362 10,533 2,085 149, 612 17, 516 19, 244 793, 770 74,058 97,024 14,154 3,826 1, 03,5, 131 35, 121 5f«71 2,400 1,317 20,532 337 41,386 3,110 4,005 267, 558 64,505 71, 758 21, 168 4, 189/ 530,557 34, 955 105 712 5,738 37, 918 5,627 217 75 1,772 1,043 40, 939 11,664 8,820 118, 266 24, 677 117 1 19, 299 17, 081 413 11 1,345 659 10, 516 25, 787 17, 291 5,653 14,865 1,716 12, 385 2,719 6,089 2,597 4,642 16, 699 15 2,306 295 4,456 7,467 ■: 3,899 312 5,641 7,531 1,391 2,941 423 1,662 • 6, 269 6,652 12,680 2,255 9,005 56 9,843 1,801 13, 916 12, 155 12, 283 2,998 4,391 8,588 155 1, 344, 669 1, 069, 933 12, 958 6,060 52, 608 49, 370 888, 448 874, 383 791, 439 552, 805 503,307 73, 671 665, 523 119, 975 448, 229 139, 923 239, 160 571, 098 2,960 86, 213 14, 757 237,279 390, 165 143, 346 21, 274 185, 642 267, 962 35,543 89, 736 21,002 114, 241 500, 698 242,669 1, 233, 831 95, 919 493, 847 4,867 514, 311 78, 632 898, 637 470, 995 810, 692 138, 611 216, 216 488, 929 12,270 1, 754, 182 1, 460, 774 3,401 170 34,664 45, 278 1, 233, 432 670, 442 531, 996 550, S.9 398, 589 68, 137 418, 095 72,275 350, 799 130, 838 189, 496 407, 989 14 43,232 4,220 112, 792 118,307 111, 437 1,202 81,473 105, 147 16, 741 80, 514 7,310 94,125 309, 112 84,671 1, 389, qpo^ 109,071" 361, 028 1,171 270, 055 52, 440 807, 165 302,311 582, 012 96, 889 141, 149 448, 292 903 4,043 30, 835 5,674 243 523 5,526 3,288 5,052 17, 931 4,111 1,527 27, 666 6,037 4, 083 60, 651 1,012 357 30 32, 649 1,110 S3, 448 41, 348 5,266 4,842 139, 483 164 886 677 8,022 4,067 4,730 30, 358 1,766 13, 587 60 85, 458 397 11, 360 97, 701 57, 881 9,841 38,259 3,179 1,065 334, 055 17, 807, 375 15, 657, 458 888, 544 570, 536 246, 303 5,138 65 21,535 25, 381 152, 804 871, 845 540, 402 156, 729 308, 298 36, 334 252, 787 57, 499 157, 086 23, 395 171, 123 465, 263 170 2,420 3,206 87, 842 88, 428 83, 557 2,325 44, 552 30, 297 27, 910 60, 227 9,585 38, 165 120, 961 227, 831 572, 285 46,287 259, 111 1,720 69, 035 50, 521 324, 121 80, 319 213, 485 66, 441 138, 257 143, 399 1,730 7, 517, 300 900, 833 666. 101 5,459 315 31, 136 41, 091 622,294 710, 367 359, 374 271, 809 379, 613 113, 648 314, 752 79, 656 232, 976 64, 973 195, 247 616, 605 195 . 61,375 7,945 57, 964 212, 249 93, 330 3,344 57, 165 219, 804 13, 728 70, 928 15, 069 83, 851 222, 442 61,948 917, 116 97, 991 329, 603 1,276 263,965 41, 780 538. 102 308, 021 399, 423 35, 310 61, 057 283,451 2,865 11, 059, 260 2,056 35 200 1,500 4,655 2,081 1,000 40 1,702 138 539 135 100 1,034 211 50 637 405 23,340 1,067 26, 400 110 1,000 305 87, 340 61, 449 81, 478 209 21 70, 646 22, 935 37,717 24, 081 7,806 170 52, 583 1,999 63, 525 1,308 14, 909 13, 379 2,173 261 3,'l38 9,742 70 47 43, 199 3,269 78, 673 16, 321 26, 455 180 123, 110 28,741 113, 310 1,671 9,492 34, 244 1, Oil, 933 1,952 2,033 171 10 146 282 3,059 ■ 1, 251 939 392 445 279 441 394 633 5,349 431 1,169 32 5,608 7 403 9,596 411 275 2,859 10, 355 364 1,217 109 341 1,221 681 1,995 570 770 28 18, 092 1,103 4,584 4,889 433 785 811 99,484 128, 516 185, 692 23, 846 3,725 29, 534 28, 345 147, 014 149, 895 75, 366 65,826 85, 659 36, 472 109, 031 39, 598 82, 059 84, 166 102, 899 93, 244 1,125 45, 551 22, 556 60, 605 142, 882 41, 213 13,625 70, 412 94, 403 19, 775 51, 056 16, 951 47, 878 96, 341 51,023 167, 717 56, 440 110, 732 3,785 149, 417 33,543 119, 067 115, 864 188, 892 61, 090 63, 705 110, 093 6,090 3, 818, 309 20 252 Dot) 403 45 62 73 118 60 7 2,396 1C8 STATE OF WISCONSIN, AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PEODUCED. a, o; o ■o ■«• Adams Ashland Bad Ax Brown Buffalo Bumette* — Calumet Chippewa . . . . Clark Columbia Crawford Dallas* Dane Dodge Door -. Douglas Dunn Eau Claire . . . Fond du Lac . Grant Green Green Lake . . Iowa Jaekson Jefferson Juneau Kenosha Kewaunee La Crosse Lafayette La Pointe Manitowoc ... Marathon Marquette Milwaukie Monroe Oconto Outagamie ... Ozaukee Pepin Pierce ... . Polk Portage .. Racine Richland Rock Saint Croix . . . Sauk — Shawano Sheboygan... Trempeleau . . Walworth ■VVa-shington .. Waukesha Waupaca Waushara Winnebago . . . Wood 124 2 379 986 097 1,292 188 198 100 138 53 $325 8,278 4,635 142, 648 1,437 144,917 46, 738 88, 457 6,692 6,192 920 1,710 7,958 258 4,082 2,302 6,763 14 120 25 10 539 46 331 66 903 976 3,503 423 153 54 1,820 765 158, 633 775 19, 898 580, 145 40, 170 8,675 300 35 44, 936 3,060 5,653 236 1,129 36,418 3,612 147 87 48 632 113 220 894 2 Total. 1,249 900 1,769 8,482 235 279 12 599 406 1,398 1,482 1,025 455 452 905 859 812 1,336 2,570 5,983 2,812 989 726 731 26 85 207 7,644 2,790 428 1,112 816 543 3,340 3,522 550 100 1,123 1,791 3,253 8,600 877 2,639 5,711 1,192 2,460 5,294 12, 834 8,808 2,260 702 200 4,796 73 449 9,349 2,329 32 709 21, 349 393 2,572 130 448 12, 898 235 378 472 154 50 668 645 291 611 187 793 56 072 100 102, 1, 6, 24, 1, 49, 52, W, 1, 226 36 785 431 892 10 658 1,509 1,054 1,003 272 214 850 815 1,294 643 2,562 33 3,857 171 771 494 693 632 310 833 320 110 4,106 53 340 223 51,451 330 138 20 780 36, 749 106 312 182 2,666 7,950 3 124 292 10, 439 85 9,119 497 200 308 4,071 9,347 2,563 9,854 6 223 1,278 758 321 213 228 10, 674 103 1,257 320 800 318 856, 221 4.051 50 24, 950 32, 711 634, 774 452, 027 673, 966 331, 490 295, 578 54,580 512, BOG 112,640 376, 079 61, 716 108, 401 314, 434 100 136, 457 8,180 223,474 427, 606 141, 020 9,805 189, 874 987, 704 20, 474 50, 699 11, 147 86,730 426, 622 235, 301 804, 104 54, 795 3B9, 286 2,240 503, 970 71, 000 594, 063 404, 901 667, 954 153, 275 296, 102 464, 840 325 72, 619 49, 391 1,350 1,195 144, 467 43, 307 76, 227 32, 196 13, 190 9,650 49, 371 6,672 45,267 17, 575 30, 462 740 10, 965 11, 812 6,194 20 4,660 15, 170 610 3,695 250 7(50 29,280 2,956 91, 567 2,407 30,547 25,167 4,120 88, 499 16, 173 59,185 5,140 8,191 27,733 61, 263 56, 201 295 140 2,626 2,931 50, 014 33, 175 38, 963 26, 435 28,228 3,962 35, 838 9,021 36, 607 7,123 15, 316 30, 088 48 .3, 416 1,097 15, 158 21, 554 8,276 1,687 6,727 8,419 2,150 3,026 965 3,385 28, 551 9,403 40, 748 4,104 23, 414 414 14, 739 4,343 42, 275 12, 211 35, 104 7,455 13, 142 36, 057 472 18 178 146 90 116 17 27 7 138 526 39 263 2 10 323 356 27 749 75 405 707, 307 38, 987 78, 690 6,278 208, 730 13, 611, 328 1, 104, 300 855, 037 358 1,335 1 7 49 1,617 1,676 1,779 704 190 106 499 183 512 15 333 245 13 33 261 410 1,011 17 180 79 991 116 3,397 5 406 9,835 1,722 814 159 37 179 26, 512 61 4,119 13,12 132 103 2,857 19 60 46,878 59 85 13 8 3,600 115 20 74 3 4,379 20 19, 316 07 2,350 18, 418 1, 450 16, 886 '' No returns. STATE OF WISCONSIN, 169 AGRICULTUEE. PEODUCED. 1 ■g- 1 1 HEMP. ■s 1 1 •a s s u o Pi i t CD § II If r 1 °' 1 a 1 ° 1 Ji 2 316 t240 $27,353 761 46, 859 9,198 19, 624 12,200 48,054 23,763 64 4,664 545 7 841 11 85 1 1 57 193 4 96 7,978 50 1,986 2,573 195 200 ^ 4 «! A 40 165,550 1,800 13,801 6 4,391 6,958 75 1,177 278 36, 579 3,793 3,586 133,636 17, 575 Fl 728 695 1,194 10 130 123 350 3,201 708 9 100 5 2 350 361 1,379 600 10 n 1" 119 2,666 6 98 576 107 357 3,143 12,182 2,452 8,238 252,567 196, 609 1,641 1,020 17,381 10, 08,1 147, 561 185, 578 177, 836 81,921 95, 694 17, 490 154, 183 22,126 78, 019 24,821 n 1 154,274 8,832 750 1,680 13,713 1,085 -|ii 15 ifi 1,000 66 25 185 10 160 17 1 74 1,222 15 3 186 IS 293 1,071 266 80,368 7,086 31,583 301 583 100 103,966 16,692 3,344 729 1,227 10 30 415 496 726 67 27 12 234 120 202 9,751 16,004 13,583 2,685 2,164 335 6,923 2,795 3,356 100 3,123 6,964 9,181 291 312 19 75 5,349 1,747 1,075 579 "0 «1 w 24 ffl "I 730 226 17 54 4 47 4 178 4,991 438 1,163 1,151 15,639 1% •>n - 830 97 70,563 7,295 "R 99 2 862 200 6,800 67,394 3,345 100 29,023 150 9,015 175, 609 19,649 2,875 21,603 50 3,540 1,337 82,572 970 4,030 22,099 1,300 157,523 727 10 1,976 661 203 1,670 29 309 6,039 2,966 260 2,260 60 71 99 4,144 5 276 1,481 298 6,728 1,734 105,129 410 SO, 031 2,144 45,741 73, 229 24,096 4,038 35, 497 57, 001 8,263 18, 714 3,076 20,167 72,668 56,154 S16, 992 19,180 106,507 997 85,416 12,432 187, 462 93,338 159,523 31, 195 49,818 79,699 2,850 30 V 3 90 489 100 r' 33 . 1 4 2 8 31 15 124 820 131 200 314 52 449 1,620 7,218 395 60 2,576 2,809 2,382 6,425 526 677 160 34 15 35 36 3 64 209 31 101 37 60 825 1 60 3 17, 349 1,163 20 3,100 38 39 661 40 20 41 49 46 849 12 2,266 1,473 9,382 8,161 19, 567 333 312 43 21 240 203 9 703 315 2 10 184 813 832 3 345 6,403 12,208 20,409 150 9,186 44 9 45 SO 4R 47 498 461 4R 49 60 14 1,803 160 16 260 309 2S0 43 31 91 7,221 773 8,153 4,812 10,412 1,418 1,215 5,601 1,056 50 20 822 51 10,030 909 50 76 92 401 47 6 1 3 1 1,200 95,769 45,994 42,231 20,888 20,807 2,035 595 8,015 1,578 884 536 353 119 5,369 4,966 2,649 498 991 407 52 25 23 53 57 730 15 186 54 20 55 5R 57 58 97 17 242 21,644 4,256 15 1,584,451 19,854 83,118 8,008 207,294 127,992 3,365,261 22 170 TERRITORY OF DAKOTA. AGRICULTURE. ACEES OP LAND. L LIVE STOCK. TBREITOEY. ■a 1 a 1" 1 1 •s S 11 i ! < 1 1 ,2 1 o ai 1 ■s 1 1 Total in Territoiy 2,115 24,333 $96,445 J15,574 84 19 S86 348 167 193 287 $39,116 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. TEKEITORY. 1 f t i §■3 1 •s 1 - f o ■s ■s s 1 i f 5f ■s 1 1' 1 Total in Territory 945 700 20,269 2,540 10 286 9,489 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. s B ,3 a o ,Q ft^- Cm ,4 'S TEEEITOET. S^ .§ r J 1 *" If o f 1 J "S f 1 1 ■g 1 ■g^ S S & 1 g n M o ■^ n o n 3 iS H Totid in Territory ...... H5 2,170 855 302 AGRICULTURE. PEODUCED. ■s - imMp. ■g- 1 E ■« . i Pi □Q t U p< i h t 1 1 1 - Pi 1 1 = II S ta -0 TKKRITOEY. 1 a 1 (4 1 "0 £ ft p. a 1 •4 Total in Territory 20 $375 DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. 171 AGRICULTURE. DISTRICT. ACRES OF LAND. a ■rf ■a §■1 LIVE STOCK. I •3 I 5 Total in Dietrict . 17,47* 16,789 $2,989,267 $54,408 122 639 198 40 1,099 $109, 640 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. DISTRICT. 1 •s I'-s i 1 1 ^ il i i » r 1 i 1! 1 ■s Total in District 1^760 6,919 80,840 29,548 15,200 100 3,749 31,693 5 606 AGRICULTURE. l: — ~ — '~ ] ] '■■■ — : r- 'Z — i. ■ PRODUCED. •s f" o '1 « DISTRICT. 1 1° 1 = 1 1 II II 1 1" 8 * i^ 1 s s s ^ s J3 o n s 5 n Total in District 175 445 $9,980 118 $139,408 18,835 3,180 AGRICULTURE PRODUCED. ■s 1 HEMP. i OB 4 1 » 1 ■s t 1 ° s 1 1 1 ■2 ^ DISTBICT. 1'^ 1° 1 II t -a 1 24 SIQ $440 $55,440 1 172 TERRITORY OF NEBRASKA. AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. ACEBS OF LAND. ! |l i *• 11 US LIVE STOCK. 1 1 3 g 2 o. U 1 a 1 i < 1 ti 1 ■s 1 1 o 579 1,593 2,941 9,258 $14,300 41,490 *1,510 3,705 14 56 31 138 45 127 69 224 o Burt 1 30 rt Butler* 4 Onlhmiii ^ 150 16,963 455 1,229 164 2,897 256 39, 014 3,960 4,357 1,916 14,416 4,180 518,381 8,590 21,800 4,120 57,950 305 23,421 1,225 32, 300 750 7,632 3 674 31 63 5 130 9 849 67 116 13 309 14 482 78 85 27 171 13 1,364 72 97 29 368 5 CaBB 15 542 fi Cedar 7 Clay 1 15 R Oniniiig^ , 4 Dakota 8 40 10 11 TliTnn . 983 1,737 5,551 4,668 12,022 34,727 12,380 49,155 305,510 1,815 4,316 11,093 31 73 264 115 119 340 84 83 206 142 191 419 I" Dodge 4 13 10 81 n 14 FortHandall* 15 Gage 1,075 1,281 18,595 1,786 21 8 9 117 3 5 2 1 66 3 86 224 9 78 4 117 139 11 ',89 2 63 181 10 16 Green 17 HaU 838 2,503 40 4,772 10,838 120 23,150 60,822 1,000 2,940 4,661 150 18 Johnston 51 IP Jones 90 Kearney" '1 460 368 209 25,080 2,190 '. 3, 132 1,711 40,047 11,000 7,210 6,500 392,655 1,965 735 375 21,130 23 12 10 717 2 66 8 11 964 38 42 24 665 75 9- 6 1,069 33 W L'Eau qui Court Merrick "T 15 19 5 300 94 95 Nuckolls* "6 Otoe 26,890 3,475 2,876 190,223 - 14,986 17, 195 1,369,770 93,300 35,260 27,815 4,938 6,123 875 142 108 263 3 12 1,304 298 199 8,496 183 176 1,298 403 312 256 101 4 97 98 Platte 9» Madison* 30 Polk* 31 EicharrtBon 11,601 30 6,646 45,412 450 33,671 352, 505 20,958 260 14,716 565 15 338 91 891 41 449 723 29 246 1,098 12 544 745 32 Saline 33 313,753 9 140 34 Shorter* 35 Washington 4,497 18,862 127,950 9,040 137 5 270 221 449 2 Total. 118,789 512,425 3,878,326 205,664 4,449 469 6,995 12,594 17,608 2,355 *So returns. TERRITORY OF NEBRASKA. 173 AGRIOULTUKE. UVJJ STOCK PEODUCED. 00 1 t 1 1 1 a .a i ° 1 t 1 1 f p, o il Is ■si t •3 1 •s h s ■s o ® •s 5 1 1 30 $5,290 15, 749 845 826 15 16,200 23,015 200 1,320 25 235 6,200 4,145 ;| 359 96 o T 28 1,185 100,075 7,575 11,810 2,494 31,365 155 74, 966 10 763 27 2,187 1,450 362,800 2,965 75 1,480 24,370 100 15,876 15 533 10 62 15 954 225 20,850 1,380 1,091 615 10, 121 4 4,302 120 110 550 1,139 5 6 199 1,350 7 66 21 539 g 968 5 9 in 341 10,205 14,034 41,895 410 2,508 8,593 5,020 13,686 73,990 30 2,731 12,462 84 210 293 3,115 3,635 1,472 n 260 1,228 12 90 70 165 19 14 176 7,530 1,235 9,840 22,047 750 270 15,950 7 103 1,731 15 Ifi 16 645 8 29,050 41,525 600 10,420 2,935 30 17 917 190 62 18 19 •^n 239 32 9 7,345 2,605 4,350 104,286 455 5,850 3,880 9,100 202,814 45 15 203 830 11,463 2,550 11,463 21 22 23 3,331 18,677 581 4,864 203 24 05 3,503 1,C5S 321 474,302 29,571 22,736 9,536 1,518 1,884 236 26], 165 60,605 18, 550 14,083 318 1,697 594 249 180 22,532 4,593 5,991 28 110 1,459 173 27 oq ?ft 4,690 S 1,775 107,097 3,610 58,148 6,945 113 191, 925 6,070 1,550 1,422 223 11,517 6 32 8,650 72,910 10,703 307 209 14,306 33 34 895 32,642 7,725 43, 105 3,253 552 8,978 Ti 25,369 1,128,771 147,867 2,495 1,482,080 74,502 3,636 3,302 5,029 162, 188 168 174 .fERRITORY OF NEBRASKA, AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. — ■ .- ■ - PRODUCED. m 1 1 i" 1 ft « 1 1 ■g- i •a |"S i 1 s •i •3 1 20 175 30 $300 100 8,710 495 990 2 3 Burt 450 Butler* 80 2,070 50 59,561 1,600 4,425 1,000 14,950 5 34 2 775 450 50 ee 1,260 517 344 289 162 1,910 5 6 g 7 8 9 10 Clay 344 1,000 11 140 711 5,035 7,919 22,162 711 962 2,348 13 765 49 2,965 140 512 « 14 15 16 Port Itandftll* 46 3,700 60 194 GcTe&D. 17 18 19 20 21 22 Hall . . 15 445 200 600 12,790 300 900 481 100 150 2,575 500 245 122 270 2,074 Merrick 1,150 370 44,481 438 14 . . .. 110 2,840 921 228 75 70 991 54,905 17,231 9,861 5,500 1,109 50 4,967 1,152 1,263 119 33 25 29 MadiBon* 30 Polk* 139 1,972 17,487 220 37,945 300 236 10 ^T 713 240 4,438 1,300 1,982 12 T4 Shorter* 35 Washington 40 333 50 210 293 24,434 230 1,744 Total 1,108 12,224 125 671 10,582 342,541 12,342 24,458 5 705 41 * No return TERRITORY OF NEBRASKA. 175 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. •s 1 > ri i i 1 •i a HEMP. "S i t p. s t m 1 1 g 1 1, P« & 1 1 o si ■a 1 DO i i It 1"^ 1 313 60 $2,202 9. 20 19,684 515 817 163 4,672 4 2 100 6,315 110 191 65 668 2,350 $11,823 5 6 7 R 600 to 1 1 1 Cm O k 1 • o 1 1 O 1 s o I: 1 ll r o r 1 ■a IS •s S do" ■a ° S s g.« 1 OS 3,571 $177,553 3,581 98 460 882 330 13 5,686 200 1 2 85 50 200 2 3,571 177,638 3,631 98 460 1,082 330 15 5,686 200 AGRICULTUEE. PRODUCED. t ■s 1 1 1 ■i HEMP. O ■s" •3 1 an" S o ■s If si o t S (M i| a> & i ° f to "3 1 i 1 1 •a 1 1 £■3 1 1^ $300 «8,185 • 1 9 1,200 •\ 300 9,385 23 178 TEEEITORY OF NEW MEXICO, AGRICULTUEE. COUNTIES. ACEES OF LAND. 3 a t LIVE STOCK. 3 o Arizona Bernalillo ... DoOaAua .. Mora Itjo Ariba . - . Santa Ana - . Santa F£ . . . San Miguel. Socorro Taoa Valencia — 12, 216 12, 189 14,490 ■3,243 28, 077 4,947 13, 266 21, 550 7, 175 9,777 22,344 28,101 623, 661 23,554 4,875 270 7,068 260, 581 149, 205 7,061 18, 963 142, 296 $395,700 321, 532 180, 540 90, 310 281,488 103,263 181, 000 559, 296 183, 905 230,378 179, 924 $16,839 23,434 12, 069 7,936 26, 999 7,358 5,824 55, 297 6,267 22, 691 8,203 1,827 1,375 654 486 1 028 420 416 929 495 1,477 959 276 2,930 677 340 1,612 499 643 1,186 223 1,298 1,607 1,255 5,601 1,380 2,137 2,056 873 993 8,515 2,528 2,822 6,209 730 2,979 1,679 1,334 1,957 644 1,584 3,943 3,169 3,766 3,431 3,445 5,570 1,397 2,615 576 1,765 2,560 2,019 3,812 3,792 1,543 640 268, 082 21, 697 36,230 14,857 37,076 28,910 96, 682 35, 368 96,251 193, 723 Total. 149, 274 1, 265, 635 2, 707, 386 192, 917 10, 066 11,291 34, 369 25, 266 29, 094 830,116 AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. o 1 1 •i 1 ■a -^ 1° 1 f 1' ■s 1 a ■a 11 1 o Q4 1 t i 1 o o s § a 3 U g o O P on 1 » 1 4,905 $2,250 6,074 50 5,700 26, 950 1,200 1,000 325 V $4, 648 2,630 200 908 695 "i Doila Ana 935 1,200 1,300 ^ Mora 1,000 2,000 4,200 *, Kio Ariba 10,128 1,995 75 e Santa Ana 50 2,810 4,430 26 520 55 5,480 10 33 1 Santa F6 H San Miguel 150 9 195 64 1,425 4,140 10 415 190 2,400 155 50 10 Taoa 6 11 30 240 40 - Total 6,099 6 19, 651 . 8,260 17^»664 13,259 37,240 i, 113 » TERRITORY OF NEW MEXICO. 179 AGRICULTUKE. LlVii STOCK. PRODUCED. 1 1 s m •1 t 1 OQ 1 at 1 o •3 1 s g 1 1 o I.- If a ■g 3 1 ft ® 1 1,457 9S8 tl96,722 1,050,263 188, 525 248, 523 219,972 216, 311 210, 750 638, 554 298, 420 526, 048 705, 658 202,407 10, 212 25,293 23,290 44,317 4,986 6,061 9,661 20,965 71, 617 15,500 296, 698 42, 149 60, 636 19, 211 45, 538 9,328 22,913 88,492 38,997 31,755 53,587 5,304 523 19 9,408 3,399 3,684 867 4,071 455 785 1,315 4,461 4,215 5,854 1,720 10 24 752 100 190 66,340 200 35,730 75 95,023 25,600 83, 498 8,625 93, 864 83,690 1,984 1,230 80 'T 421 2,280 50 1 517 396 70 957 4 715 50 A 295 7 931 349 718 1,650 8 1,043 q 1,309 3,819 in .1, 002 398 n 10, 313 4, 499, 746 434,309 1,300 709, 304 7,246 7,044 19 492, 645 38, 514 5,223 180 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. ■s' so 1 1 m 'i < HEMP. ■s 1 i to 1 S ■a 1 i s g 1 ft 1 if t n 1 1 h. |t CO 1 ft 1 1 It 1 i h i II 1,950 $5,511 107 $30, 663 51,625 7,848 11, 898 15,203 15,839 15, 790 41, 804 31,495 26,356 98,584 1 f 3 4 ■) 85 1,975 18,514 6 7 8 q 10 214 11 ' *1, 950 26,400 347, 105 '*Iu addition, 1, 519 gallons produced from com stalk. 180 TERRITORY OF UTAH, AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. ACRES OP LAND. CM O 1 O a 11 i > 1 LIVK STOCK. 3 •a 1 1 i' 1 i 1 1 S, DO < TO S 1 s o 1 1 1 O 1 1 Beavef i;728 4,323 6,286 646 8,278 14 359 _ 1,977 m, 129 84,075 132,130 6,7.35 255, 899 $7,840 7,624 17, 059 3,231 18, 101 145 202 252 49 537 75 2 24 8 79 332 646 941 303 1,041 247 471 1,080 86 715 263 840 648 204 1,242 674 936 1,769 164 4,100 o T 4 Cedar R 865 6 7 H 300 2,656 1,276 1,241 14,335 8,819 197 1,000 18, 196 7,375 13, 868 290, 970 104, 600 2,320 600 11,290 7,198 6,772 44, 161 33, 031 1,450 1 211 73 215 971 345 14 14 28 43 39 224 6 445 306 631 1,602 1,381 115 75 341 172 265 1,152 1,668 40 q Iron. _.. 219 336 285 627 2,372 1,221 114 1,855 1,334 766 7,259 5,569 256 10 n Millard 554 2,823 3,583 1" Salt Lake 1^ 14 11 Ti Summit* --- 16 17 Tooele Utah 1,820 14, 941 107 725 42,010 139, 660 6,115 56, 652 115 750 10 244 448 2,277 273 1,519 415 2,344 1,691 7,058 18 Walade* 19 1,540 8,933 110 1,336 47,064 184,324 4,850 16, 915 136 559 26 35 382 1,211 165 879 320 1,729 1,303 2,598 "0 Weber SI Country E. of Wasatcli Total 77,319 12,692 1,333,355 242,889 4,565 851 11,967 9,168 12,959 37,322 AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES. PRODUCED. 1 M 1 so 1 1 1 1 h t Cm O i II o m 1:3 a I 1 ■ ■s i 1 m 1 1 •i ■s :-. 1 ° 1 1 OQ 1 . "S" 1 1:, 1 Beaver 112 780 578 23 2,941 6,925 24,641 34, 390 4,065 33, 114 3,470 3,395 1,600 3,040 3,855 274 1,343 1,578 336 1,549 |- 3 Box Elder 3 Cache 21 4 Cedar 5 DaviB $140 6 Deseret* 7 Greasewood* . . . ♦, 8 Green River 50 421 603 477 2,673 3,347 71 9 Iron 252 7,682 8,160 12,215 39, 483 32,549 1,795 1,825 2,218 9,950 4,555 3,995 10 Juab 11 Millard 1" 2,630 76 36 8 7,296 1,335 60 $9, 445 1 40 48 30 3 13 San Pete 14 Shambip 15 Summit* In Tooele 32 1,478 300 160 225 160 13,390 45,667 1,260 5,548 957 4,354 61 '"""■"""■ 17 Utah 12 18 "Walade* 19 Washington - 11 1,063 6,705 46,286 6,710 3,910 17 1,285 2 500 30 Weber 13 50 SI Country E. of Wasatch MouutahiB* Total 9, 976 fiS 9,281 60 9,830 316, 046 53,331 19,235 3 149 . 545 *No returas. TERRITORY OF UTAH, 181 AGRICULTURE. LlVi! STOCK. PRODUCED. 1 1 1 'S 1 ■s 1 00 1 i = "S OQ 1 i" o ■s -3 1 o Eh :§ °° "S .Q ° s 1° i3 si 1 h 1 1 o 1 02 170 $47,507 69,835 118,963 21, 355 140,956 11,729 18,077 29,341 6,223 40, 170 339 7,262 7,977 370 11,429 1,184 4,651 2,906 460 3,533 3 1,667 2,063 3,955 512 7,924 15 262 408 4,881 7,340 9,771 1,719 11,220 1 352 10 2 365 100 3 126 4 543 375 280 6 7 5,500 56,765 39,285 58,215 248,160 188,732 8,200 2,500 2,762 1,387 988 7,291 16,710 379 200 7,671 3,293 3,198 22,761 15,654 788 ft 314 29,236 9,680 12,789 41, 843 55,439 3,141 10 1,570 2,103 364 17,598 1,684 73 5,211 2,882 1,516 13, 396 9,573 453 29 6 20 731 81 q 149 in 173 11 1 081 166 T' 632 3 n 38 14 Ti 146 30, 070 276,706 7,602 73,716 2,669 13,606 1,031 12, 921 3,640 12,685 87 36 2,039 35,016 Ifi 1,566 50 17 18 183 44,431 162,037 5,285 40,621 3,838 19,600 215 4,303 30 2,500 6,788 174 406 1,481 13,969 It 869 143 0(1 91 6,707 1,516,707 384, 892 754 90, 482 63,211 136 74, 765 2,535 141, 001 AGRICULTURE. PRODUCED. ■s 1 > ■g- 1 1 HEMP. ■s if 1 1 1 1 1 Pi 00 §■3" i g i . 1 . g ■1- s t li 1 i i 02 o 1 P. u 1 , 1 1 1 = ll la oa 1 h 1 m s ■s L O 590 1,202 1,629 $976 1,284 1,700 275 2,907 $6,752 11,519 15, 415 3,198 23,823 1 435 220 ** 4 113 815 12 3,871 ■; a 7 800 R q 106 2,879 1,425 15,974 14, 833 805 7,855 9,412 46,289 28,965 935 10 11 1 1,377 45 40 4,716 650 12 1 13 14 ^•i :• 15 100 2 8 2,633 2,150 12,244 7,335 47, 004 10 IB 1,000 336 10 8 7,728 2,353 4,306 6,093 7,522 27, 538 19 20 "1 114 4,343 33 40 *25, 475 66,851 244, 862 * In addition, 7, 063 gallons produced, of other kinds. 182 TERRITORY OF WASHINGTOiN. AGRICULTURE. COUHTIES. ACRES OF LAND. > I o LIVE STOCK. ChihaliB Clallam Clark Cowlitz Island* Jefferson King Kitsap* Klickatat Lewis Paeifie Pierce Sawamish Skamania Spokane Thurston Walla-Walla . Wahkiakum.. Whatcom 739 56G 13, 364 2,681 2,936 4,727 46, 490 16, 971 $49, 500 90, 300 428, 510 153, 400 $2, 785 3,635 23,336 5,469 41 9 643 135 162 78 1,499 507 46 48 331 143 320 117 3,001 920 480 3 488 2,132 6,978 12, 894 75, 250 56, 150 3,225 103 280 173 341 Total. 1,222 8,133 1,075 15, 593 649 723 3,440 23,894 6,903 163 106 9,185 24,439 6,336 32, 788 14, 862 3,339 8,719 59, 515 29,233 3,598 2,287 48,550 287,785 49, 400 178, 940 69, 417 17, 800 79, 300 363, 930 179, 810 77, 400 13, 400 6,270 20, 745 2,180 23,360 5,808 1,193 14, 205 40, 521 32,920 1,640 250 187 405 62 619 35 33 641 804 1,070 16 9 793 861 169 1,109 114 71 336 1,960 1,532 33 53 221 79 45 287 76 22 96 384 683 18 16 81,869 284,387 2, 317, 843 190,402 9,660 2,571 1,660 1,058 318 1,744 305 78 436 3,389 2,356 70 16,228 741 164 4,190 2,833 1,240 96 10, 157 AGRICULTURE. COUNTIES PRODUCED. s ■s "i n 1 1° i ■s oa g i d to o i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 IS 1 1 ■s o Pi 1' 1 Chihalis ?635 100 12,339 3,105 3,530 200 45,706 10,756 100 32 8 o ClaUam Clark 20 161 600 1 491 60 tl4,291 2,615 131 7,000 1,600 1,983 530 100 79 3 6 4 3 t^ Island* ^ 300 1,480 3,130 2,605 134 99 10 15 7 King 1,240 R Kitsap* q Klickatat 215 3,848 9,280 6,895 31, 050 1,990 825 5,285 35,487 3,770 645 100 400 30 in Lewis - 11 Pacific 170 810 23 150 55 82 445 394 571 57 5 4 13 34 6 19 Pierce 100 1,050 in 118 75 1,575 1,835 100 310 1,400 780 50 14 15 Spokane 278 47 2,060 96 1,070 830 2 41 35 16 Thurston 56 1,300 48 17 WaUa-Walla 18 1,350 500 3 19 Total 4,621 707 20, 619 179 21, 399 IS), 092 12, 146 ^ 4,580 7 311 44 ^N'l i'r turiJM. TERRITORY OF WASHINGTON 183 AGRICULTURE. LIVE STOCK. PRODUCED. 1 ■s 1 > 1 OD 3 ■s ■s ■3 ■g .a 1 S 1 a ■ o ■3 •a i 0. g g 1 o 1 •d o a CM .9 ° 1 'o 1 i ■s 5 1 1 341 $20,635 13,773 139, 653 42,078 590 4,366 6,796 1,778 3,300 2,250 16, 264 645 1,200 250 2,356 2,886 2,870 29, 950 28,904 11,785 348 1,482 37 548 18 10 1,315 980 640 126 13,220 23,785 960 1,395 3,080 920 90 773 7,400 34,282 225 131 75, 756 97,070 21,851 157, 775 16,717 5,830 42,038 225,830 189,860 5,565 8,475 8 14,115 1,275 15, 493 150 50 6,061 28,418 4,719 45 470 24,245 3,375 16,485 170 165 5,068 35,362* 22,305 290 6 93 815 1,109 286 41 52 508 25 360 120 5,370 8,695 16,404 9,190 2,720 1,999 19, 590 2,845 880 590 9 610 1,875 315 11, 080 10 112 11 662 30 2,050 12 119 IS 55 34 35 25 1,996 6 14 105 27 150 878 3,719 16 296 17 SO 535 18 233 6 383 1,099,911 86,219 144 4,712 134,334 10 19, 819 10, 850 163,594 18 AGRICULTURE. PEODTICBD. ■s 1 t 1 ■a s 1 HEMP. 5 ■i .£3 1 m o P. § = 3 a o 1 Is O CM O i ■3 1 . il 1 ^ ! o « $3, 185 1 504 60 4,638 618 $26,728 3,962 21,308 5,015 1,350 4,800 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 e.i • 2,008 4,270 4,550 22,865 390 2,315 7,3^ 40 210 717 30 ,)^ 1,749 laS 100 W^iM 30 564 5,256 > w -' ■Jt'^ 184 RECAPITULATION— 1860. AGRICULTURE. STATES. Alabama Arkansas California Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Uliuoie Indiana Iowa Kansas.... Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland MassachusettB Michigan Minnesota MlsBissippi Missouri New Hampshire New Jersey New York North Carolina Ohio Oregon Pennsylvania Khode Island South Carolina Tennessee Texas Vermont Virginia Wisconsin Total, States TEKRITOUIES. Columbia, District of. Dakota Nebraska Nevada New Mexico Utah Washington Total, Territories . Aggregate, States and Territories h^ ACRES OF LAND. t 6, 385, 7^4 1, 983, 313 2, 468, 034 1,830,807 637, 065 654,213 8,062,758 13, 096, 374 8, 243, 183 3, 792, 792 405,468 7, 644, 208 2, 707, 108 2, 704, 133 3,003,267 2, 155, 512 3, 476, 296 556, 250 5, 065, 755 r, 246, 871 5, 367, 034 1,944,441 14, 358, 403 ( , 517, 284 12, 625, 394 890, 414 15. 463, 296 335, 138 4, 673, 060 6, 795, 337 2. 650, 781 2, 823, 157 11,437,821^ . 3,7467l67 162, 649, 848 17, 474 2,115 118, 789 14, 132 149, 274 77, 219 81,869 ':60, 872 163, 110, 720 ■a 13, 718, 831 7, 590, 393 6, 362, 000 673, 457 367j230 2, 266, 015 18,587,732 7,815,615 8, 146, i09 6, 277, 115. 1, 372, 932 11, 519, 053 6, 591, 468 3, 023, 538 1, 833, 304 1,183,312 3, 554, 538 2, 155, 718 10, 773, 929 13, 737, 939 1, 377, 591 1, 039, 084 6, 616, 555 17, 245, 685 7, 846, 747 1, 164, 125 6, 548, 844 186, 096 11, 623, 859 13, 873, 828 22, 693, 347 1, 451, 257 19, 679, 215 4, 147; 430 241, 943, 671 16,789 34, 333 512, 425 41, 986 1, 265, 635 12, 693 284, 287 2, 158, 147 244,101,818 $175, 824, 623 91, 649, 773 48, 726, 804 90, 830, 005 31, 426, 357 16,435,727 157, 072, 803 408, 944, 033 356, 712, 175 119,.899, 547 12,258,239 291, 496, 955 204, 789, 662 78, 688, 525 145, 973, 677 123, 255, 948 160, 836, 495 37, 505, 922 190, 760, 367 230, 632, 126 69, 689, 761 180,250,338 803, 343, 593 143, 301, 065 678, 132, 991 15,200,593 063, 050, 707 19, 550, 553 139, 652, 508 271, 358, 985 88rl01, 320 94, 289, 045 371,761,^,661 131, 117, 164 6, 631, 520, 046 2, 989, 267 96, 445 3, 878, 325 302, 340 2, 707, 386 1, 333, 355 3, 217, 842 13, 524, 961 6,645,045,007 at ft >» a g $7, 433, 178 4, 175, 326 2, 558, 506 2, 339, 481 817, 883 900, 669 6, 844, 387 17, 235, 472 10, 457, 897 5, 327, 033 737, 694 7, 474, 573 18, 648, 335 3, 298, 327 4, 010, 529 3, 894, 998 5, 819, 832 1, 018, 183 8, 826, 513 8, 711, 508 2, 683, 012 5, 746, 567 29,166,695 5, 873, 943 17, 538, 832 952, 313 22, 443, 842 586, 791 6, 151, 657 8, 465, 792 6, 359, 452 3, 655, 955 9, 392, 296 5, 758, 847 245,205,206 54,408 15, 574 205, 664 11, 081 192, 917 242, 889 190, 402 912, 935 i, 118, 141 LIVE STOCK. w 127, 063 140, 198 160, 610 33, 276 16, 562 13,446 130, 771 563,736 520,677 175, 088 20, 344 355,704 78, 703 1 60, 637 93, 406 47, 786 136, 917 17, 065 117, 571 361, 874 41, 101 79, 707 503, 725 150, 661 625, 346 36, 773 437, 654 7,121 81, 125 290, 883 335, 698 69, 071 287, 579 116, 180 6, 224, 056 641 84 4,449 541 10, 066 4,565 4,772 25,118 6, 249, 174 111, 687 57,358 3,681 83 2, 394 10, 910 101, 069 38, 539, 28, 893 5,734 1, 496 117,634 91, 762 104 9,829. 108 330 377 110, 733 80,941, 10 6,363 1,553 51,388' 7, 194. 10 56, 456 126, 345 63, 334 43 41, 015 1,030 1, 138, 103 123 19 469 134 11, 291 851 159 13, 045 1, 151, 148 I 230, 537 171, 003 205, 4P7 98, 877 22, 595 92, 974 299, 688 523, 634 363, 553 189, 803 28,550 269, 215 129, 662 147, 314 99, 463 144, 492 179, 543 40,344 207, 646 345, 343 94,880 138, 818 ,, 123, 634 228,623 676, 585 53, 170 673, 547 19,700 163, 938 249, 514 601, 540 174, 667 330, 7l3 203, 001 8,516,874 639 286 6,995 947 34, 369 11, 967 9,660 64, 863 8, 581, 735 I 88,316 78,707 26, 004 47, 939 9,530 7,361 74, 487 90, 380 117, 687 56, 964 21, 551 108, 999 60,358 79, 792 34, 524 38,221 61, 686 27, 568 105, 603 166, '588 51, 512 10, 067 121, 7((3 48, 511 63, 078 7,469 60, 371 7,857 22, 629 102, 158 173, 492 42, 639 97, 872 93, 652 2, 204, 275 348 12,594 620 25, 366 9,168 2,571 50, 636 2, 354, 911 454,543 318,089 948, 731 95, 091 35, 596 287, 735 631,707 970,799 588, 144 293, 322 43, 354 457, 845 326,787 149, 827 119, 254 97, 201 238, 615 51, 345 416, 660 657, 153 118, 075 89, 909 737, 837 416, 676 895, 077 93, 493 685, 575 11, 548 320, 209 413, 060 2, 761, 736 153, 144 615, ^82, 225, 207 14, 699, 215 198 167 "17,608 3,904 29, 094 12, 959 16,228 80, 158 14, 779, 373 0. a .a 370, 156 202, 753 1, 088, 002 117, lOT 18,857 30,158 513^018.- 769, 135 991, 175 259,041 17,569 938, 990 181, 253 452,472 155, 765 114, 829 1, 271, 743 13, 044 353, 632 937, 445 310, 534 135, 228. 2, 617, 855 546, 749 3, 546, 767 86, 053 1, 6.31, 540 32, 631 233, 509 773, 317 753, 363 752, 201 1,043,269 332, 954 ,590,706 40 193 2,355 376 830, 116 37,332 10, 157 22, 471, 275 NOTE Milch cows— California, p. 10—905, 407, should read 205, 407. RECAPITULATION AGRICULTURE. 185 ^ LIVE STOCK. \y pro: B-^ s w % ° 1, 748, 321 1, 171, 630 456, 396 75, 120 47, 848 271,743 2, 036, 116 8,502,308 3, 099, 110 934, 820 138,224 2, 330, 595 634,525 54,783 387, 756 73, 948 372, 386 101, 371 1, 532, 768 2,354,425 51, 935 236, 089 910, 178 1,883,214 2, 251, 653 81, 615 1, 031, 266 17, 478 965, 779 . 2, 347, 321 1, 371, 532 52,912 1, 599, 919 334,055 33, 459, 138 25,369 3,571 10,313 6,707 6,383 53,729 33, 512, 867 143,411,711 22, 096, 977 35, 585, 017 11,311,079 3, 144, 706 5, 553, 356 38, 372, 734 72, 501, 225 41, 855, 539 22, 476, 293 3, 332, 450 61, 868, 237 24, 546, 940 15, 437, 533 14, 667, 853 12,737,744 23, 714^771 3, 642, 841 41,891,692. 53; 683, 673 10, 924, 627 16, 134,693 103, 856, 296 31, 130, 805 80, 384, 819 5,946,255 69, 672, 726 2, 042, 044 23, 934, 465 60, 211, 425 42, 825,, 447 16, 241, 989 47, 803, 049 17, 807, 375 1, 080, 758, 386 109, 640 39, 116 1,128,771 177, 638 4, 499, 746 1, 516, 707 1, 099, 911 8, 571, 529 1, 089, 329, 915 1,218,444 957,601 5,928,470 52,401 912,941 2,808 2, 544, 913 23, 8.37, 023 16, 848, 267 8,449,403 194, 173 7, 394, 809 32,208 233, 876 6, 103, 480 119, 783 8,336,368 2, 186, 993 . -587, 925 - 4,227,586 238, 965 1, 763, 218 8,681,10.5 4, 743, 706 15, 119, 047 826, 776 13, 042, 165 1,131 1,285, .631 5, 459, 268 1, 478^345 437, 037 13, 139, 977 15, 657, 458 172, 034, 301 12, 760 945 147,867 3,631 434, 309 384,892 86, 219 1, 070, 623 173, 104, 924 72, 457 78,092 52, 140 618, 702 27, 209 21,306 115, 532 951, 281 463, 495 183,022 3,833 1, 055, 260 36,065 123, 287 518, 901 388, 085 514,129 121, 411 39, 474 293, 262 128, 247 1, 439, 497 4, 786, 905 436,856 683] 686 2,704 5, 474, 788 28,259 89, 091 257, 989 111,860 139,271 944, 330 888,544 33,226,282 17, 823, 588 510, 708 2, 059, 835 ( 3, 892, 337 2, 834, 391 30, 776, 293 115, 174, 777 71, 588, 919 42, 410, 686 6, 159) 727 64, 043, 633 16, 853, 745 1, 546, 071 13, 444, 922 2, 157, 063 12, 444, 676 2, 941, 952 29, 057, 682 72;'892, 157 1, 414, 628 9, 723, 336 20, 061, 049 30, 078, 564 73, 543, 190 76, 122 28, 196, 821 461, 497 1,"), 065, 606 52, 089, 926 16, 500, 702 1, 525, 411 38,319,999 7, 517, 300 21, 088, 970 6, 919 700 2,495 98 1,300 754 144 12, 410 682, 179 475, 268 1, 043, 006 1, 522, 218 1, 046, 910 46, 899 1, 231, 817 15, 220, 029 5, 317, 831 5, 887, 645 88, 325 4, 617, 029 89, 377 2, 988, 939 ' 3, 959, 298 1, 180, 075 4, 036, 980 2, 176, 002 221,235 3, 680,-870 1, 329, 233 4, 539, 132 35, 175, 134 2, 781, 860 15, 409, 234 885, 673 27, 387, 147 244, 453 936, 974 2, 267, 814 985, 889 3, 630, 267 10, 186, 720 11,059,260 493,465 16,831 2,140 223, 704 52, 507, 652 6, 331, 257 716 3,286 809, 082 -a,. 767 7, 593, 976 119, 100, 528 40, 372 26, 031 8,225 232, 914 989,980 3, 150 6, 000, 133 9,699 828,815 919, 318 6, 885, 262 7, 993, 378 303, 168 20, 349 108,126,840 39,940 1,583 38, 410, 965 3, 233, 198 121, 099 38, 938 159| 141 25,"G8erl96 18, 581 149, 485 5, 764, 582 32, 853, 250 ,25,092,581 405 3, 181, 586 705 104, ,412 43, 448, 097 97, 914 12, 245 123, 968, 312 87, 340 989, 955 367, 393 65,153 701, 840 1,482. 61 777, 738 1,202,507 7 41,188 '145,514 353, 412 ^296, 464 431, 463 12, 727 775, 117 410, 382 2, 683, 109 335, 896 50, 201 59, 171 946, 227 1, 989, 567 2, 552, 318 660, 858 24, 746 2, 329, 105 ?90, 847 1, 495, 060 491, 511 377, 267 3, 960, 888 20, 388 665, 959 2, 069, 778 1, 160, 222 349, 250 9, 454, 474 883, 473 10, 608, 927 219, 012 4, 752, 522 90, 699 427, 102 1, 405, 236 1, 493, 738 3, 118, 950 2, 510, 019 1, Oil, 933 1, 482, 036 440, 472 165, 574 25, 864 7,438 363, 217 1, 765, 214 108, 028 79, 902 41, 081 9,827 288, 346 431, 148 246, 915 34, 407 45, 246 165, 128 18, 988 1, 954, 666 107, 999 79, 454 27, 674 1, 609, 339 1, 932, 204 102, 511 34, 407 123, 090 7,698 1, 728, 074 547, 803 341, 901 70, 654 515, 168 99, 484 491, 646 418, 010 1, 789, 463 1, 833, 148 377, 931 18, 766 303, 789 5, 540, 390 3, 866, 647 2, 806, 720 296, 335 1,756,531 294, 655 6, 374, 617 1, 264, 429 3, 201, 901 5, 261, 245 2, 565, 485 414, 320 1, 990, 850 4, 137, 543 4, 171, 690 26,447,.394 830, 565 8, ,695, 101 303, 319 11,687,467 542,909 226, 735 1, 182, 005 174, 182 5, 253, 498 2, 292, 398 3, 818, 309 5, 439,917 1, 566, 540 214, 307 2,710 142, 213 1, 129, 759 6, 508, 541 306, 154 299, 516 51, 362 9,965 1, 057, 557 2,060,981 1,435 236, 740 616 38, 492 792 4, 563, 873 335, 102 161 1, 034, 832 7,529 6, 140, 039 304, 445 335 103, 187 946 4, 115, 688 2, 604, 672 1, 846, 612 623 1, 960, 817 2,396 836, 404, 593 80, 840 20, 269 1, 482, 080 460 709, 304 90, 482 4,712 172, 330, 722 29,548 2,540 74, 502 1,082 7,246 63, 211 134, 334 187, 167, 032 434, 183, 501 5, 386, 897 59, 673, 952 110, 629, 993 42, 088, 854 15, 200 10 3, 636 7,044 10 19 136 3,302 330 492, 645 74, 765 19, 819 3,749 286 5,029 15 38, 514 2,535 10, 850 31, 693 9,489 162, 188 5,686 5,223 141, 001 163, 594 5,606 168 200 180 2, 388, 147 312,463 25,900 590, 961 60, 978 518, 874 6,172 838,792,740 172, 643, 185 187, 167, 032 434, 209, 461 5, 387, 052 60, 264, 913 111, 148, 867 42, 095, 026; 24 y X 186 RECAPITULATION — 1860, AGEICULT/URE STATES. PRODUCED. 3 m S V s 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 -11 13 13 14 15 16 17 . 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 Alabama Ark.insas California Connecticut Delawave , Florida Grcorgia Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts. . . Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri New Hampshire New Jersey New York North Carolina . Ohio ., Oregon Pennsylvania. . . lihode Island . . . South Cai'oUna.. Tennessee Texas Vermont Virginia Wisconsin Total, States. TERKITOBIES. Columbia, District of. . Dakota Nebraska Nevada New Mexico Utah Washington Total, Territories - 15, 135 3,158 4, 415, 426 20, 813 3,646 8,369 14, 682 1, 036, 338 382, 245 467, 103 4,716 270, 685 224 802, 108 17, 350 134, 891 307, 868 109, 668 1,875 228, 502 121, 103 24, 915 4, 186, 668 3,445 1, 663, 868 26,254 530, 714 40, 993 11, 490 25, 144 67, 562 79, 211 08,846 707, 307 1,347 509 76,887 309, 107 16, 355 15, 802, 322 175 1,108 1,597 6,099 9,976 4,621 23,576 Aggregate, States and . Territories 15,825,1 2,023 324, 117 396, 989 215, 705 41, 575 18,928 160 239, 519 212, 338 123, 202 529, 916 28,052 1,699 182, 292 89, 996 877, 386 5, 126, 307 35, 924 2, 370, 650 2,749 5, 572, 024 3,573 602 14, 481 1,349 225,415 478, 090 38, 987 17,558,253 445 115 12, 224 707 13, 565 17,571,818 $223, 312 56,025 754, 236 508, 848 114, 225 21,259 176, 048 1, 126, 323 1, 258, 942 118, 377 656 604, 849 114, 339 501, 767 252, 196 925, 519 1, 122, 074 649 254, 718 810, 975 557, 934 429, 402 3, 726,380 643, 688 1, 929, 309 478, 479 1, 479, 937 83, 691 213, 989 305, 003 48,047 211, 693 800, 650 78, 690 19, 932, 229 »9,980 125 19, 651 9,281 20,619 59, 656 19, 991, 885 18, 267 1,004 246, 518 46, 783 683 336 27, 646 50, 690 102, 895 3,369 583 179, 948 2,912 3,164 3,222 20, 915 14, 427 412 7,262 27, 827 9,401 21, 083 61, 407 54,064 568, 617 2,603 38,621 507 24, 964 13, 566 14, 199 2,923 40, 808 6,278 1, 617, 954 118 1,260 60 179 1,627,242 $163, 062 37, 845 1,161,855 337,025 37, 797 20,828 201, 916 387,027 546, 153 169, 870 31, 64] 458, 245 413, 169 194, 006 530, 221 1, 397, 623 145, 883 174, 704 124,281 346, 405 76,256 1, 541, 995 3, 381, 596 75,663 907, 513 75, 605 1, 384, 968 140, 291 187, 348 303, 226 178, 374 24,802 589, 467 208, 730 15, 955, 390 139, 408 10,582 2,225 17, 664 9,830 24,399 204, 108 16, 159, 498 6,028,478 4, 067, 556 3, 095, 035 7, 620, 912 1, 430, 502 408, 855 5, 439, 765 28, 052, 551 18, 306, 651 11,953,666 1, 093, 497 11, 716, 609 1, 444, 742 11, 687, 781 5, 265, 295 8, 297, 936 15, 503, 482 2, 957, 673 5, 006, 610 12, 704, 837 6, 956, 764 10, 714, 447 103,097,280 4, 735, 495 48, 543, 162 1, 000, 157 58, 653, 511 1, 021, 767 3, 177, 934 10, 017, 787 5, 850, 583 15, 900, 359 13, 464, 722 13, 611, 328 458, 827, 729 18, 835 2,170 342, 541 7,700 13,259 316, 046 153,092 853,643 459,681,372 15,923 16, 810 1, 343, 689 3, 898, 411 6,579 5,280 15,587 1, 848, 557 605, 795 918, 635 29,045 190, 400 6,153 1, 799, 862 8,342 5, 294, 090 1, 641, 897 199, 314 4, 427 259, 633 2, 232, 092 182, 172 48,548,289 51, 119 21, 618, 893 105, 379 2,508,556 181, 511 1,543 135, 575 275,128 8, 215, 030 280, 852 1, 104, 300 62,1211 9,356 305, 655 562, 425 36,973 11, 478 \ 46, 448 \%, 774, 55i 622,426 813, 173 56, 232 158, 476 52, 721 244 95 90 13, 671 3,595 630 3,168 286 13,024 1,165 a 'i\ 975, 803 103, 548, 868 12,342 37,240 53,331 12, 146 115, 059 103,663,927 191, 744 665, 331 768, 256 179,482 32, 901 401, 070 642, 741 508, 726 3, 564, 793 181, 3te i, 564, 502 y\ 27,986 2,245,413 82,732 87, 587 143, 499 , 11, 865 \ 940,1784^ 445, 133 1 855, 037 19,028,262 3,180 855 24,458 2,213 1,113 19,235 4,580 55,634 19, 083, 896 635 18, 831 60,726 3,454 103 2,308 1 48, 849 39, 811 1,295 54,408 432 8 2,216 12, 690 39, 205 106, 934 333 243, 489 1,433 247, 351 1,221 28 8,572 585 2,445 36, 962 3,852 955, 871 302 S 317 956,188 1,914 191, 273 34, 914 69, 366 3,043 62, 561 700 6,306 3,195 4,6 8,045 3,182 1,084 55, 713 5,569 85,408 81,625 3,008 54,990 3,883 57, 193 4,237 38 42, 113 5,228 11, 587 53,063 26, 512 898, 875 705 149 311 1,165 900,040 RECAPITULATION— 18 60. 187 AGRICULTURE. PEODIKffin. 1 1 i, 1 a HEMP. "S 1 1^ ■i ■s •a DO 1 ° CM o if •3 il ID t II 10 63 39 517 229 123 813 6 167 2 29 22 38 1,923 1,281 186 47 387 1,552 108 47, 740 1, 227, 665 27, 932 200 50 11 88 51 3 IW 36 13 .77 846 2,750 87 8 226, 001 ,7,032 14 1"i 16 643 17 7 18 255 iq 1,048 12,291 368, 131 2,100,116 527,160 160,063 584,469 446, 932 7,152 68,393 63,660 26 321 18, 904 75,801 13, 696 10,787 36,888 188,880 519 1,191 1,959 w 15 141 1,355 60 9,330 158,557 437, 405 178,910 248, 904 2,821,192 4,588,209 2,439,794 610,976 78,407 91 454 16,432 15,968 3 10 32 23 95 96 100 50 97 98 9 63 246 331 i7d 138 189 431 268 314 168 184 254 222 48 1 96 5 1 21 30 4 30 21 4 4 138 4 23 16 13 37 39 59 30 2 19 2 3 19 67 8 3 6 34, 32 20. COUNTIES. Lowndes Madison Marengo Marion Marshall Macon Mobile Montgomery Monroe Morgan . — Perry Pickens Pike Randolph — Russell Shelby St. Clair Sumter Tallapoosa . TaUadega . - Tuscaloosa . Walker - Washington Wilcox Winston Total ACRES. 18 30 13 65 35 19 76 2 9 31 13 16 23 112 11 11 25 8 46 6 46 56 5 5 15 41 34 34 156 118 15 129 16 51 64 33 55 85 431 145 55 144 4 170 91 130 145 17 81 105 4,379 340 4'61 317 63 117 99 239 236 183 353 516 965 258 239 480 20 751 453 497 407 114 107 158 16, 049 230 183 103 313 186 100 25 150 171 182 204 330 508 478 435 64 513 331 388 164 138 44 50 12, 060 394 363 322 127 133 440 21 364 255 196 375 467 522 213 109 235 161 294 432 337 376 61 334 40 13, 455 117 95 104 5 13 109 109 31 31 88 53 24 2 35 13 2 71 27 49 47 89 7 2 !,016 ABKA1VSA8. COUNTIES. Arkansas Ashley Benton Bradley Calhoun Carroll Chicot Clark Columbia Conway Crawford Crittenden..;. Craighead Dallas Desha Drew Franklin Fulton Green Hempstead . . . Hot Spring . . . Independence . Izard Jackson Jeffei'son Johnson Lafayette Lawrence Madison ACRES. 30 24 60 43 3 39 2 30 30 37 2 6 9 4 23 < 25 47 20 36 31 33 11 55 118 28 45 8 49 90 25 76 72 165 130 28 198 4 93 118 130 34 33 42 52 41 104 242 108 112 87 154 108 144 285 124 111 69 228 '145 167 260 396 335 139 •440 29 317 462 261 205 63 112 228 97 250 306 193 181 .300 312 504 ^314 342 218 262 199 477 347 132 227 144 77 230 27 150 316 108 139 33 49 142 43 167 138 79 81 175 123 267 135 116 110 187 94 229 210 136 78 115 53 94 267 26 39 62 10 " 126 70 127 66/ 18' 17 164 36 92 .45 99 130 6? 82 80 66 21 1 1 5 2 4 12 1 12 17 4 1 3 5 30 23 2 19 COUNTIES. Marion Mississippi .- Monroe Montgomery. Newton Ouachita Perry Phillips Pike Poinsett Polk Pope , Praii'ie , Pulaski , Randolph St. Francis . . . Saline Scott , Searcy Sebastian Sevier Union Van Buren . . . Washington .. White Yell ACRES. 33 39 18 38 55 26 45 46 86 49 45 37 1 59 8 54^ 32" 6 45 7 45 38 1,823 80 53 206 110 126 68 66 68 36 139 196 148 151 91 79 81 133 84 151 187 30 115 96 163 87 6,075 279 109 112 202 148 370 192 146 112 84 222 379 267 2(J8 221 216 268 252 211 292 299 117 184 525 311 234 13, 728 40 59 54 56 230 77 113 42 40 61 180 121 103 93 133 154 89 101 117 156 118 92 375 120 143 6, 957 27 34 61 25 16 221 17 179 6 47 12 59 76 73 43 123 68 33 32 34 110 254 28 130 56 60 2 10 3 1 1 1 7 27 307 5 7 1 10 1 41 4 1 1 1 194 CALIFORNIA — CONNECTICUT. FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE CAIilFORIVIA. COUNTIES. Alameda Amador Butte Calaveras Colusi Contra Costa... Del Norte El Dorado Fresno Humboldt Klamath lios Angelos — Mariposa Marin Mendocino Merced Monterey Napa Nevada Placer , Plumas Sacramento — Santa Barbara. : ACRES. 34 23 49 2 18 9 58 15 2 7 46 15 10 1 1 3 9 14 17 54 54 28 39 9 24 12 46 22 24 10 51 17 10 2 5 15 16 25 20 102 21 97 95 64 88 24 69 18 79 22 67 21 94 27 28 2 21 31 48 46 61 5 152 1 o g o o 4 134 307 72 132 94 182 75 99 21 131 84 214 11 34 64 192 12 14 27 9 8 11 61 49 28 22 42 152 35 435 24 76 39 97 92 218 37 30 55 97 15 151 136 710 • 14 9 12 5 14 7 21 26 4 31 4 3 17 8 5 18 28 4 27 61 2 12 10 19 13 COUNTIES. San Bernardino. . Santa Clara Santa Cruz San Diego San Francisco — San Joaquin San Luis Obispo . San Mateo Shasta Sierra Siskiyou Solano Sonoma Stanislaus Sutter Tehama Trinity Tulare Tuolumne Yolo Yuba Total.. ACRES. 1 21 46 21 18 2 •22 15 15 19 1 8 43 49 11 78 22 46 2 3 32 21 17 16 18 21 14 24 14 16 70 33 39 40 39 144 31 27 21 67 43 4 37 34 65 20 153 54 65 79 1,102 2,344 18 173 42 27 11 128 18 64 54 40 50 122 26 103 26 18 91 60 100 77 2,428 16 274 112 8 22 582 14 82 74 178 143 478 123 271 94 16 102 47 6 9 1 2 45 22 21 26 7 26 17 10 26 13 538 COIVJVECTICrT. ACRES. ACRES. ci S ^ C3 COUNTIES. S3 "^ « COUNTIES. s g fe 1 1 1 1 1 1 o 1 1 1 in 1 1 1 g s 13 o 8 8 tH 6 7 n in 1 Fairfield 176 245 468 452 1,576 1,043 754 1,386 1,281 1,303 627 952 New London TolHtid 58 45 30 202 95 6S0 454 947 779 950 521 6 o Hartford 9 6 2 1 3 Litchfield 33 112 1,428 8 Windham 87 563 992 950 7 4 5 Middlesex New Haven 111 238 236 429 613 1,206 660 1,147 515 723 5 6 1 Total 936 2,081 6,898 8,477 6,666 39 4 DELAWARE — FLORIDA. 195 FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. ACRES CD cj s COUNTIES. s s fe Si £ -s 1 1 1 g § g § g s 13 1 s 1 s § § s s ira m *"• 1 16 16 31 56 83 76 270 274 682 606 469 1,153 996 840 1,026 i 7 3 o New Castle 3 Total . 63 215 1,226 2,208 2,862 14 FliORISA. COUNTIES. ACRES. 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 COUNTIES. ACRES. i s 1 1 1 S 1 i 8 I— 1 1 i 1 1 i S 1 o g CJ o i g o p g i-h" s 1 i 20 24 7 3 50 29 91 3 21 56 96 69 1 24 13 83 102 7 3 13 21 37 1 27 58 23 26 20 45 11 15 48 14 31 85 33 100 15 HI ■ 1 47 131 32 58 36 12 56 37 73 37 71 136 95 96 3 78 113 32 7 2 7 Manatee 44 8 5 18 17 17 1 1 15 6 95 Marion L 154 15 5 42 9 1 2 11 59 9 19 7 4 36 15 23 6 40 33 41 11 39 6 18 3 2 43 15 4 3 48 16 25 1 1 n New River Orange 7 41 8 47 20 1 2 23 53 8 2 81 92 17 4 7 1 2 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Santa Rosa 94 67 153 81 20 4 7 17 5 3 10 1 19 20 23 12 Suwannee 4 1 Sumter HUlBborough 57 11 6 86 27 60 8 9 12 15 14 96 64 210 92 25 46 20 35 24 22 119 57 15 45 14 14 5 13 147 130 10 1.32 13 22 Taylor Volusia 4 1 2 1 27 26 4 53 1 3 12 11 30 Wakulla Walton 2 1 1 8 Washington Total 18 19 430 945 2,139 1,162 1,432 211 77 20 " No returns. 196 GEORGIA, FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. COUNTIES. Appling Baker Baldwin Banks Borrien Bibb Brooks Bryan Bullock Eurko Butts Calhoun Camden Campbell Carroll Cass Catoosa Chattahoocbee . Charlton Chattooga Chatham Cherokee Clark Clay Clayton Clinch Cobb Colquitt Columbia Coffee Coweta Crawford Dade DawBou Decatur DeKalb Dooly , Dougherty Early Echols Effingham Elbert.... Emanuel F.lnnin Eayette Floyd Forsyth Franklin Fulton Gilmer Glasscock Glynn Gordon Greene Gwinnett Habersham Hall Hancock Haralson Hart Harris Heard Henry Houston Irwin Jackson Jasper ACRES. 11 2 30 10 20 1 4 11 3 2 11 6 6 15 21 14 4 5 1 5 28 2 7 14 10 S6 1 33 26 44 15 7 26 12 8 7 8 5 13 75 30 7 6 24 ID 41 75 14 3 7 35 68 14 4 67 34 3 4 35 15 21 22 1 4 19 28 18 28 39 23 40 22 24 31 120 8 14 26 1 53 40 22 4 30 42 10 23 30 5 14 30 1 187 52 78 107 168 95 45 67 155 80 63 55 22 135 329 158 76 68 46 110 43 325 76 41 66 93 286 51 53 127 207 47 35 133 117 104 113 13 26 41 100 126 126 130 132 178 213 242 88 293 46 9 350 27 315 166 216 37 97 203 80 137 215 33 53 217 26 100 37 66 110 87 85 80 50 133. 99 ai 53 11 305 322 170 86 82 14 126 28 269 80 65 92 55 361 47 76 59 310 96 50 102 143 158 189 31 34 38 77 136 143 100 160 228 252 215 98 136 73 13 290 52 269 146 271 72 68 151 144 167 83 44 207 73 46 65 121 96 40 145 141 42 146 315 l85 93 36 180" 168 194 87 142 3 155 59 190 192 88 114 32 201 22 208 22 350 171 60 59 201 213 203 78 102 20 103 210 150 37 181 245 150 110 62 61 62 32 152 206 167 98 189 195 39 109 360 184 340 229 30 195 211 1 40 17 17 19 4 3 100 28 19 10 3 1 7 5 21 4 17 1 21 20 7 29 47 33 3 74 13 3 3 43 1 5 62 10 29 96 1 10 1 4 1 1 71 2 5 4 12 2 3 1 21 22 1 40 25 ■68 69 70 71 ■72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 123 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 COUNTIES. Jefifersou Johnson Jones Laurens Lee Liberty Lincoln Lowndes Lumpkin Macon Ma/lison Marion 'Mcintosh Meriwether . . Miller Milton Mitchell Monroe Montgomery . Morgan , Murray Newton Oglethorpe . Paulding Pickens Pierce Pike Polk Pulaski Putnam Quitman Kabun Randolph . . . Richmond . . . Schley Scrivcn Spalding Stewart Sumter Talbot Taliaferro . . . Tatnall Taylor Telfair Terrell Thomas Towns Troup Twiggs Union Upson Walker Walton Warren Ware Washington . Wayne Webster White Whitfield.... Wilcox* Wilkes Wilkinson . . . Worth ACRES. 7 3 4 1 18 2 27 6 17 3 10 1 12 2 7 11 1 1 1 1 3 4 1 52 6 10 16 4 3 10 1 4 14 4 13 3 1 8 16 10 7 3 15 1 3 7 10 1 17 9 35 25 78 9 28 15 24 6 3 28 7 2 37 5 27 10 32 47 28 16 6 1 17 28 7 35 12 17 5 17 4 7 27 23 26 15 4 24 2 16 9 28 16 5 34 19 35 I 26 17 20 5 15 37 2,803 42 40 19 99 40 112 9 120 142 74 123 75 33 136 65 53 127 22 148 56 117 34 270 155 122 153 107 123 6 60 119 107 108 41 97 109 72 123 38 43 199 98 97 75 30 97 40 36 189 76 175 95 44 79 81 94 37 105 163 60 30 81 100 106 53 S3 108 48 60 35 104 89 110 121 104 20 163 27 137. 79 105 69 34 131 76 155 99 28 188 93 108 16 50 79 127 73 74 108 96 147 127 77 54 104 99 53 99 60 57 110 53 134 124 230 178 105 28 151 28 77 93 203 53 57 146 257 80 179 125 97 104 119 1 101 36 180 157 184 30 370 36 66 62 380 69 152 119 151 358 259 84 40 13 346 110 149 157 14 37 216 118 104 211 198 281 203 263 115 61 128 64 130 163 31 420 131 49 210 325 408 240 23 358 13 139 43 131 35 •202 346 52 39 40 18 30 7 4 40 14 37 9 63 4 6 10 94 4 71 4 35 49 30 1 19 38 65 3 29 15 19 19 11 67 39 69 10 14 27 1 58 37 50 4 34 43 2 52 2 2 69 14,129 ILLINOIS. 197 FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE, ACRES. COUNTIES. 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 43 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 Adams Alexander Bond Boone Brown Bureau Calboun CaiToll Cass Champaign. . Christian Clark Clay Clinton Coles Cook........ Crawford Cumberland . DeKalb DeWilt Douglas Du Page Edgar Edwards Effingham-.. Fayette Ford Franklin Fulton G-allatin Greene Grundy Hamilton — Hancock — Hardin Henderson . . Henry Iroquois Jackson Jasper Jefferson ... Jersey Jo Daviess . . Johnson Kane Kankakee . . Kendall Knox Lake La Salle Lawrence .- Lee 1 22 4 3 16 5 1 5 20 17 42 51 260 6 10 4 2 4 3 23 67 18 11 15 3 27 16 14 6 12 11 22 36 39 10 19 56 9 7 50 5 25 4 8 63 45 1 6 93 29 9 36 27 5 8 61 43 59 123 397 91 39 6 19 23 13 91 1 132 114 41 104 69 57 21 31 38 113 102 181 112 99 247 29 29 13 101 15 53 36 32 640 124 125 170 401 328 106 330 125 191 177 443 331 382 355 959 556 295 176 104 265 295 200 168 224 462 19 425 826 237 282 91 425 655 207 138 405 637 386 474 544 377 568 629 281 391 161 617 281 542 359 326 42 320 535 366 1,000 96 459 300 421 342 461 338 524 307 951 380 248 796 253 210 515 430 195 264 397 46 251 1,051 206 393 326 264 908 67 376 845 558 236 322 345 283 604 223 564 556 443 910 603 1,541 342 726 738 17 329 613 161 1,028 68 471 348 553 499 266 310 352 409 905 154 200 1,142 460 265 630 710 123 165 235 56 141 748 94 483 439 98 776 54 354 732 427 84 204 266 328 399 49 963 458 688 846 697 1,673 174 584 6 18 24 17 4 3 5 13 13 2 19 T.4 16 11 37 10 6 22 18 3 23 5 7 2 1 7 2 10 COUNTIES. 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 99 100 101 102 Livingston ... Logan MSDonough . . McHenry McLean Macoi^ Macoupin Madison Marion Marshall Mason Massac Menard Mercer Monroe Montgomery. Morgan Moultrie Ogle Peoria Perry Piatt Pike Pope Pulaski Putnam Randolph ... Richland Rock Island . St. Clair Saline Sangamon... Schuyler Scott Shelby Stark Stephenson. . Tazewell Union Vermillion. . . Wabash "Warren Washington . Wayne White Whiteside . . . Will Williamson- . Winnebago.. Woodford . . . ACRES. 1 1 3 19 33 17 2 1 5 30 18 1 5 21_ e' 42 1 61 17 20 Total. 56 1 37 23 54 21 7 5 3 1 18 44 63 11 5 1 6 9 28 19 9 135 5 6 26 18 8 11 13 48 99 65 13 58 18 19 60 141 7 43 2 34 39 91 7 113 139 56 13 230 6 73 112 176 57 47 50 42 44 71 300 69 31 31 88 70 137 44 48 518 30 30 6,518 436 338 364 231 187 411 770 394 135 474 432 214 457 854 179 328 80 419 gSi 336 68 770 418 148 87 834 166 390 942 535 403 344 336 391 93 432 382 587 637 260 370 575 439 583 391 368 833 294 285 38, 186 455 475 620 836 715 341 816 754 348 489 539 129 331 648 475 444 460 166 900 919 252 160 828 166 59 163 564 247 477 1,100 264 646 387 262 445 396 735 747 334 641 339 674 569 419 400 692 783 332 49, 024 397 665 637 721 1,158 456 815 535 333 545 399 33 373 541 130 499 638 257 1, 023, 591 196 333 546 36 6 182 191 153 375 574 79 1,044 232 328 473 451 756 703 85 732 96 689 426 213 177 582 907 86 792 499 11 21 2 9 45 17 27 6 7 5 3 10 7 1 8 35 13 19 ■4 3 11 3 3 3 4 60 3 7 20 19 13- 21 13 6 3 2 5 14 11 14 45, 532 198 INDIANA. FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. COUNTIES. ACRES. 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 COUNTIES. ACRES. a 1 CO 1 a g o .a S r-1 1 § 8 8 8 O r-T ^^ ■s a P -p § g t o P S3 § CO T-l 1 o S o C4 8 i o f 1 8 1 1 o 1 Adams 3 49 10 2 14 65 27 38 4 9 22 31 67 32 32 29 35 15 56 21 6 8 15 28 36 18 2 54 33 26 10 14 7 30 8 33 50 251 98 53 268 94 121 99 92 142 144 160 94 118 61 123 89 208 115 20 82 73 130 119 51 57 174 274 86 108 53 57 247 90 164 7 148 174 45 54 77 145 115 64 57 39 530 1,449 602 65 234 925 357 554 719 487 480 813 377 677 833 476 651 633 845 732 176 319 481 821 465 340 708 725 938 585 704 403 592 796 720 680 211 662 685 444 510 401 726 470 274 337 222 353 590 521 97 138 575 188 549 575 507 375 601 240 559 626 530 467 559 321 748 422 125 671 735 346 428 593 538 618 520 655 480 796 339 428 523 164 433 678 458 733 366 518 400 315 425 304 61 158 328 128 27 171 70 209 143 283 152 213 108 260 248 410 106 260 76 304 355 83 299 303 131 308 194 317 186 181 258 539 328 51 79 371 158 79 296 186 527 250 192 241 « 201 402 534 12 59 i 1 12 14 31 45 10 1 8 8 3 7 63 60 48 32 41 14 32 51 12 24 30 14 21 40 116 76 128 90 58 76 61 125 135 8 64 29 28 92 65 199 179 64 119 129 33 164 349 23 118 56 112 188 61 219 28 99 67 198 42 138 30 101 252 12 181 40 82 141 54 145 654 736 514 383 808 311 641 621 72 682 126 252 812 460 499 606 358 60: 297 310 1,014 1,070 491 528 311 730 697 125 637 511 428 455 473 119 509 177 480 951 192 701 461 424 669 259 675 565 773 260 247 564 416 765 601 115 446 144 367 642 596 189 338 376 443 181 554 781 548 944 494 307 785 441 49 390 565 401 548 193 283 244 202 449 660 314 438 694 842 396 347 349 228 346 83 107 168 544 672 420 90 140 93 396 451 348 57 129 236 212 110 906 230 205 462 256 102 387 145 11 113 251 243 578 75 251 67 215 311 176 364 182 545 543 69 354 79 Allen 7 9 5 2 2 3 Bartholomew Benton MarshaU 4 Martin ii Blackford 1 9 21 15 1 Q Boone 7 Brown Montgomery 2 I 1 g Carroll 1 9 Cass in Clark Clay 3 2 Noble n 2 6 3 1 I 1" Clinton n Crawford Owen 14 1 1 7 3 Ti 16 Decatur Pike 17 DcKalb Porter... . 5 2 29 2 1 IR Delaware 3 Posey 19 Dubois Pulaski . . . "0 Elkhart 1 8 91 Payette oo Floyd 2 5 1 1 1 "■f Fountain 8 Rush "4 Fr.lTlklin St. Joseph. 1 "'i Fulton 1 3 1 6 1 1 1 Scott flfi Gibson Shelby 07 Grant 1 2 1 16 1 1 1 7 1 2 20 3 2 «R Green Stark . oq Hamilton Steuben . . 1 an Sullivan fii Harrison 1 8 1 1 Switzerland Tippecanoe Tipton 32 49 102 15 35 7 51 86 5 28 S 94 14 12 6 no Hendricks 4 31 Henry 34 Howard 35 Huntington Jackson Vanderburgh 36 1 3 '1 . 2 3 37 Jasper Vigo 3R J.iy 32 64 7 11 30 65 32 14 19 17 39 Jefferson 8 40 Jennings Warrick 41 2 1 1 Washington 4'3 ICnox 43 Kosciusko Wells 44 La Grange White 9 5 45 Lake 2 13 29 1 7 6 Whitley 46 Total 2,535 9,648 49, 664 42,076 32,614 287 IOWA, 199 FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. COUNTIES. Adair Adams Allamakee ... Appanoose . . . Audubon Benton , Black Hawk. Boono Eremor Buchanan — Buena Vista - Buncombe*. - Butler Calhoun Carroll Cedar Cerro Grordo. Cherokee Chickasaw .. Clarke Clay Clayton Clinton Crawford Dallas Davis Dfcatur Delaware ... Des Moines.. Dickinson . . . Dubuque Emmett Fayette Floyd Franklin Prfimont Greene Grundy Guthrie Hamilton Hancock Hardin Harrison Henry Howard Humboldt . . . Ida Iowa Jackson Jasper ACRES. 6 24 17 2 2 40 3 15 1 17 19 73 13 26 19 3 3 6 1 12 29 1 9 44 6 12 13 168 135 4 35 40 32 51 5 10 55 21 3 132 37 65 27 4 58 123 147 39 143 1 151 2 93 33 14 34 16 6 25 15 2 13 32 70 70 7 81 173 34 58 64 654 590 29 303 331 197 307 425 1 193 9 16 90 336 56 1 332 267 3 676 489 32 278 539 455 445 587 6 824 5 598 158 66 179 77 48 197 53 13 186 178 475 235 25 5 397 744 410 39 41 243 439 13 303 191 104 144 227 127 8 8 56 564 31 5 6 87 180 4 178 74 70 61 66 87 202 2 544 601 12 202 453 288 452 623 3 553 283 118 37 158 45 30 104 62 5 153 54 567 79 8 1 233 618 337 39 S 2 16 508 4 16 55 325 477 3 97 258 117 307 302 132 66 11 75 14 9 38 19 1 48 17 373 28 7 268 152 COUNTIES. Jefferson Johnson Jones Keokuk Kossuth Lee , Lynn Louisa Lucas Madison MahaBka Manona Marion Marshall MUls Mitchell Monroe Montgomery.. Muscatine Osceola* O'Brien , Page Pocahontas Palo Alto Plymouth Polk Pottawatomie. Poweshiek Ringgold Sao Scott Shelby Sioux* Story Tama Taylor Union Van Buren . . . Wapello Warren Washington . . Wayne Webster Winnebago Winneshiek .. Woodbury Worth Wright Total. ACRES. 32 1 4 1 64 61 19 43 23 2 1 20 3 1 4 16 19 1 4 14 21 1 3 25 1 18 951 68 96 10 124 117 17 66 78 12 3 80 14 42 79 49 11 29 66 3 4 5 35 33 14 35 39 10 37 3 47 49 58 58 46 21 11 148 6 44 2 576 300 579 700 22 554 617 258 331 297 304 34 679 243 184 190 311 64 341 1 241 4 6 20 293 195 230 172 15 282 55 4,272 232 53 180 152 478 319 352 425 252 91 2 771 38 39 15 584 280 523 447 8 606 669 318 199 229 445 16 516 211 155 82 287 38 494 128 2 8 268 107 1B5 98 4 537 19 24, 139 148 67 488 362 300 597 217 49 1 322 14 5 14 19, 070 310 271 202 235 3 418 333 255 62 114 218 6 162 80 84 37 129 7 396 1 118 24 76 31 1 574 4 51 31 29 12 290 202 108 355 114 27 1 115 4 2 3 10, 521 » No returns. 200 KANSAS. FAEMS CONTAINING THEEE ACRES AND MORE. COUNTIES. ACRES. 1 1 c3 CM 1 -a 1 i s s s 1 § 1 i ■ 1 i-T ] Allen . 121 17 8 212 32 7 4 8 1 20 2 138 52 09 305 86 62 12 21 5 65 17 201 138 263 370 180 157 29- 38 9 187 44 9 241 58 52 131 82 111 77 12 9 2 68 10 3 131 14 12 68 7 52 23 4 5 6 Brown 8 9 Chase Clay Coffee j.^ 13 6 11 Davis 19 Dickinson .,. 13 Doniphan 13 2 25 8 75 2 143 54 " 25 14 Dorn , 15 Douglas 466 143 203 87 48 43 1 1 16 17 Godfrey* 18 3 1 10 1 20 35 34 72 58 69 22 37 3 103 177 148 235 286 209 49 4 4 23 112 116 138 178 123 16 1 1 4 64 77 54 59 56 10 _— — 19 Hunter SO Jackson 6 9 46 17 17 13 00 1 1 23 24 25 Lvkins ■. 3 26 Madison , 07 Marion* *>8 Marshall 2 61 22 64 39 40 49 45 -169 82 15 14 14 34 19 1 3 ^ 2 10 4 oq 78 14 7 13 SO 11 3^ 1 33 Otoe* 34 Pottawatomie 8 1 6 ■ 15 72 7 83 82 154 45 160 131 32 15 65 34 10 ' 8 12 3fS Kilcy 3fi Shawnee 37 Wabaunsee 3fi 39 Wilson* 40 6 10 21 36 43 74 18 10 2 a 41 Wyandott Total 750 1,916 4,714 2,020 700 7 * No returns, KENTUCKY. 201 FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. COUNTIES. ACEES. 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 - 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 ■ 87 88 89 90 91 93 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 103 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 COUNTIES. ACRES. o- ■d 1 o 1 § 1 1 s 1 s cj s 1 i s 1 § o s § o s I-T o 1 a 1 P. 1 s g 1 -a § 8 1 -d s 8 1 i i 1 1 § O S Adair . 16 5 13 15 33 14 6 1 6 11 34 36 5 10 9 15 34 55 6 39 44 19 14 16 9 14 11 33 20 5 5 8 61 4 4 8 3 3 21 14 13 15 11 16 36 15 6 7 13 5 8 11 10 21 25 23 36 43 23 65 50 36 40 6 21 17 139 91 47 33 69 44 236 304 21 114 67 153 9 133 34 53 65 82 63 48 9 23 164 31 31 15 18 43 119 75 18 26 65 70 78 51 45 46 52 77 89 39 53 141 58 84 186 349 146 276 317 137 197 25 69 35 430 229 253 167 317 167 522 500 102 323 198 326 63 260 ,212 287 216 451 180 190 63 169 312 147 121 74 70 235 838 345 176 116 191 398 220 220 313 257 235 226 486 158 282 148 196 185 249 280 171 221 438 170 246 82 46 79 321 77 323 181 222 294 306 224 138 228 157 331 141 120 202 249 191 485 130 177 87 265 104 170 132 107 114 273 552 331 219 118 173 556 164 370 399 275 303 157 468 73 294 142 116 228 204 167 197 133 393 434 .380 424 58 237 234 38 245 199 128 240 103 65 166 116 173 480 437 67 132 166 174 287 62 135 452 434 47 273 77 155 323 222 196 171 201 106 75 499 50 563 185 295 384 78 228 25 446 270 53 184 4 3 13 1 11 23 6 79 1 25 3 3 1 2 4 1 11/. 4 16 20 4 36 22 21 3 11 8 6 2 13 7 25 8 11 26 9 5 16 7 8 17 21 3 11 36 3 38 39 39 93 51 6 1 33 15 9 21 2 7 5 18 10 29 17 12 9 13 4 7 32 10 63 34 41 144 65 75 3 41 50 25 50 59 27 55 76 106 46 25 24 57 33 23 151 89 39 82 100 12 111 125 139 146 179. 29 90 31 33 27 46 9 34 10 37 63 91 39 34 66 37 55 81 94 17 338 166 203 385 180 226 74 158 295 115 231 185 158 162 209 364 152 190 154 274 312 54 461 454 124 330 469 67 392 236 418 331 365 80 750 161 98 168 132 55 189 51 182 392 394 138 181 316 357 188 318 309 45 241 258 193 185 72 262 108 185 396 114 158 199 223 97 272 327 250 230 296 253 244 113 301 339 250 269 479 111 386 119 262 94 104 65 600 145 74 197 187 151 308 95 212 263 250 159 235 363 250 227 333 325 68 152 185 113 85 38 176 334 110 465 77 86 98 549 39 408 67 376 226 379 147 176 308 134 185 443 393 335 337 349 69 181 33 31 36 338 108 53 109 507 657 231 268 195 265 189 150 367 424 401 308 127 106 350 o Allen Xt& Rue 4 2 ^ Laurel 1 4 Ballard 1 a Bath Lewis 35 1 7 Lincoln 2 ^ Livinggton Logan q Boydi 13 2 1 2 1 McCracken 12 ■ Breckinridge Bullitt. 8 5 1 4 1 1 60 1 11 15 ^A Ti 1 16 17 Tnlrl'nrpll Marshall 33 10 16 3 3 35 3 23 7 3 12 5 IP Meade 1 10 Carroll 6 3 4 39 53 1 7 9/- t Mercer 3 20 21 Metcalfe Montgomery Morgan 5 23 Clark 1 Mahleuburg Nelson - 1 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 1 3 1 4 2 3 63 15 21 2 3 41 3 3 1 11 4 1 1 2 7 1 1 1 2 Nicholas Cumberland Ohio . . . 1 Oldham 3 EdmondBon Pendleton 4 ay e Perry Pike 1 Powell Pulaski . Rock Castle Rowan 2 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 Russell 1 44 66 1 12 6 19 3 3 9 30 31 13 1 Scott 6 Shelby 9 Simpson Spencer 3 Taylor 5 35 1 3 Todd 2 ^' ° Trigg 3 Trimble 1 Union Henderson 13 32 2 1 3 2 Warren .. 7 49 Washington Wayne 6 Webster Whitley 10 14 1 1 1 1 Woodford 22 6 Total 'il 1,772 6,868 25, 547 34,163 24,095 1,078 166 26 202 LOUISIANA — MASSACHUSETTS FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. PARISHES. Aficension , Assumption Avoyelles Baton Kouge,East- . Baton Rouge, West. Bienville* Bossier Caddo Calcasieu Caldwell CaiToU Catahoula Claiborne Concordia , DeSoto , Feliciana, East Feliciana, West Franklin Iberville Jackson JelTersou Lafayette Lafourche Livingston , Madison ACRES. 19 27 14 14 14 21 24 23 1 10 16 10 11 6 18 2 108 77 23 11 18 25 60 45 66 135 62 11 55 2 1 40 38 57 1 1 84 115 167 198 133 27 60 71 155 92 101 214 344 23 134 13 57 296 15 124 5 16 53 94 63 33 74 30 60 86 81 305 19 121 43 a 76 41 167 20 82 25 36 14 23 82 135 129 30 177 183 12 53 155 92 359 63 250 177 65 lOi 81 195 24 299 38 19 109 14 30 18 36 24 46 44 5 61 27 26 58 32 54 39 3 41 15 16 34 18 1 64 12 8 5 7 4 1 23 4 25 7 12 8 3 4 10 12 '26 27 28 ,29 30 -Si" 32- 33 54 35 36 37 38 39 40 4.]_ 42 -43 44 45 46 47 48 PARISHES. Morehouse Natchitoches Orleans Ouichita Plaquemines Point Coupee... Rapides Sabine St. Bernard St. Charles St. Helena St. James St. John the Baptist St. Landry St. Martin's St. Mary's St. Tammany .. Tensas Terre Bonne Union Vermillion Washington Winn , Total. ACRES. 2 18 141 10 11 29 6 14 39 48 1 3 6 1 23 86 9 11 21 55 369 125 40 1 36 28 45 7 29 5 78 97 36 1 70 30 2,222 94 233 11 40 43 121 313 223 21 21 124 54 37 116 135 29 70 3 78 346 6 179 178 93 124 5 42 22 93 77 91 15 12 83 15 38 162 93 39 15 7 22 176 21 94 3,064 161 194 5 73 35 163 93 64 12 16 139 47 44 255 107 133 8 90 56 198 121 55 42 4,955 I 21 21 3 11 20 43 56 2 12 19 7 22 16 30 14 44 1 78 16 18 18 1 1,161 1 10 1 13 5 13 4 13 30 5 1 5 371 * No returns. mASSACHIISEXTS. COUNTIES. ACRES. 9 10 11 12 13 14 COUNTIES. ACRES. 1 1 n a s s 1 § 1 s 8 1 i o U3 1 § 8 1 1 o § o g tH o u 1 1 « 1 1 o in 1 i 1 1 1 § o 1 -d § i 1 1 Barnstable 105 26 127 6 216 72 56 110 218 119 365 18 371 151 143 203 388 577 1,142 90 949 753 609 719 175 1,015 527 78 794 1,117 921 944 65 1,325 104 65 364 876 745 851 1 9 Middlesex 491 20 377 219 21 186 778 22 603 620 15 570 2,016 41 1,007 1,320 12 2,142 1,611 25 446 523 17 2,638 504 14 102 96 10 1,582 2 2 9 .1 Bristol Norfolk 4 Dukes 4 1 5 Essex Suffolk 6 Franklin 5 7 Hampden 1 4 Total 8 Hampshire 2,032 4,196 11,765 10,831 6,703 29 ^ MAINE — MARYLAND, 203 FARMS CONTAINING- THREE ACRES AND MORE. COUNTIES. ACRES. 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 COUNTIES. ACRES. s •a CO is 1 1 : 8 1 1 i s 1 O 1 s 1 CO 1 o o in s 1 1 CI i s 1 1 § i o d 1 Androscog^ Arooatook 46 170 122 18 290 175 51 100 41 166 469 442 106 664 434 179 • 283 279 1,082 1,360 2,101 813 1,290 2,268 886 1,411 1,780 1,236 734 1,596 1,250 657 2,191 562 895 1,848 247 203 305 621 119 522 84 122 645 136 6 33 ' 46 72 191 222 569 70 93 167 400 487 627 2,805 779 478 1,637 1,658 1,066 2,424 1,713 824 563 1,881 1,407 544 1,710 331 179 149 678 356 105 395 2 3 1 3 PiscataiiuiB Sagadahoc Somerset 3 Cumberland Franklin 4 S 6 Kennebec 1 WasKington York 7 1 1 8 9 1 1 Total Oxford 1,719 5,435 23,838 19, 611 5,061 9 2 inARirXiAND. ACRES. ACRES. ^ g . d COUNTIES. iH g £ COUNTIES. " f.^ s 'Z a fe ■S o "§ g s ■a ^ •a •S ■§ g s ■o 1 ^ "O 3 ■3 g n § § s •d 1 -d § § o o o 8 S i a o o o § 8 1 m n r-l m rH T 19 68 296 446 420 6 Howard 17 30 100 194 383 13 3 o Anne Amndel Baltimore City Baltimore Connty. . 17 4 21 12 125 9 247 2 605 2 18 2 14 Kent 4 24 8 36 70 89 578 14 1 Montgomery Prince George's 4 76 178 515 621 830 1 16 34 76 139 172 586 61 2 5 Calvert 9 23 79 150 351 9 17 Queen Anne 2 42 75 161 722 20 6 2 19 80 138 298 1 IS St. Mary's 25 38 213 293 467 g 1 7 Carroll 10 11 5 56 96 16 298 408 28 587 502 71 798 SIO 349 2 12 33 3 4 19 20 21 Somerset 108 19 7 83 70 60 147 119 131 288 222 245 424 463 591 26 15 4 Q g Cecil Talbot q Charles Washington 1 10 Dorchester 23 48 223 345 509 3 4 22 Worcester 8 28 379 627 646 5 11 Frederick : . . . Harford 20 13 129 73 351 349 554 569 4 2 Total 457 1, 210 4,346 6,825 12,068 303 35 204 MICHIGAN. FAKMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE, COUNTIES. ACRES. 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 COUNTIES. ACRES. s 1 § ■ § a a s 8 1 1 g 1 S 1 1 1 g 1 13 n i s 1 i 1 i g § T Lenawee 9 2L 102 116 58 380 1,257 550 962 1,359 693 644 2 510 452 331 1 n 103 435 891 325 69 Livingston Macomb ■-... T 1 1 it Autrim*. Manitou* ....... 'S 16 3 109 32 54 9 8 10 81 1 22 19 10 198 30 210 828 217 111 13 9 451 5 171 14 76 672 30 655 1,039 969 692 5 12 992 8 839 11 801 418 8 396 674 967 624 4 5 436 2 476 1 706 156 4 158 209 633 344 2 n 6 10 2 3 7 5 21 2 48 1,020 146 95 47 1,086 52 1 28 657 4 2 2 fi 1 2 4 2 533 85 13 29 1,800 8 1 3 170 1 2 2 164 28 2 17 1,052 4 1 10 27 3 2 in CasB Midland 5 62 5 13 1 47 12 13 332 36 64 10 122 36 11 Cheboygan Chippewa 1 1" 5 103 Montcalm n Clinton 1 Muskegon . . i'i Delta IS 98 7 ifi 17 191 IR Gladwin* Ontonagon 13 28 15 289 11 Grand Travereo . . . Gratiot 2 24 62 12 89 313 1 43 102 250 47 186 1,425 12 74 710 834 6 28 1,046 6 12 575 599 3 5 346 5 3 157 192 "0 91 Hillsdale 1 25 11 16 126 89 79 1 101 204 224 235 120 302 330 485 192 396 C52 352 665 848 1,080 59 268 87 1 240 735 62 349 1,330 723 23 90 19 oo Saint Clair 2~ 9:1 13 17 98 94 9'i 1 Shiawasseo St. Joseph's 44 55 152 9 28 59 103 578 11 125 910 306 "fi 4 97 20 5 27 53 26 1 33 41 158 276 125 21 35 711 759 1,334 677 26 8 1,100 738 805 504 4 98 Jackson 741 472 216 198 1 4 1 1 . 1 1 Van Buron Washtenaw 29 30 Kalamazoo 3 4 31 1" Total 1,549 6,608 25,430 19, 679 9,080 40 3 *No retorna. MINNESOTA. 205 FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE, COUNTIES. ACRES. : 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 ACRES. i § 1 o 1 § a •a g 1 a •a 1 i 1 § 1 COUNTIES. § 1 si !3 O 1 § 8 i a g o S 1 § o o 1 8 > o g o s 1 s 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Aitken* i Meeker 20 1 1 5 4 54 3 9 33 32 2 144 51 2 8 12 139 1 198 1 Anoka 21 78 90 12 1 Mille Lac Becker" 1 Monongalia Morrison 2 3 40 1 Benton 1 54 5 139 28 245 13 28 6 10 1 BlueEm-tli Mower 6 Murray 49 112 100 7 Nicollet 57 27 2 Buchanan* i Noble* Carlton 1 355 1 258 2 161 Olmstead 44 2 168 7 765 2 254 59 1 32 7 Otter Tail Cass* Pembina* Chisago . . 35 82 47 2 3 497 262 7 51 1,421 149 404 378 377 10 5 4 Pierce* 1 Pine 4 2 1 Crow Wine 1 206 77 2 18 322 22 120 139 85 1 1 Pipestone* 46 16 1 1 14 37 19 257 23 5 140 58 9 10 186 151 196 401 145 12 54 19 1 6 59 2 34 30 8 1 Polk 2 78 7 244 9 187 37 117 377 186 8 3 21 1 221 1 65 33 13 41 36 2 1 4 Ramsey 47 6 35 4 121 4 248 45 16 7 46 10 146 3 231 12 213 240 90 17 Renville Eice 158 St. Louis Scott 10 23 1 G 2 1 Sherburne 1 Sibley Steams Steele Todd 5k- Toombs* Wabashaw 46 5 67 49 284 183 44 70 154 189 478 130 377 351 141 82 19 90 ^64 27 23 3 46 41 4 4 Washington 295 2 1 52 410 3 41 145 5 7 32 23 5 12 1 Total 32 2,407 4,539 8,129 2,273 649 2 8 - 4 33 *No returns. 206 MISSISSIPPI, FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. COUNTIES. ACRES. 32 33 34 -35 36- 37 38 -39- -40- ^1, 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 ,49 ..50 51 52 -53 54 ^5. -56. ■S7-, 58 59- -60- COUNTIES. ACRES. f 1 s CO 1 a 1 s d a s § s 8 § 1 g 1 § o s 1 1 > o 1 S- 1 § 1 § -d § s 1 § 8 i 1 1 s 1 i s 1 § 1 o 1 10 20 91 1 85 42 74 127 9 23 10 33 30 40 53 26 2L 115 405 8 445 192 219 564 31 108 32 214 139 180 164 51 7 135 328 19 273 228 253 414 28 101 27 211 83 270 79 16 77 268 275 132 148 400 316 234 135 150 73 289 86 490 142 17 70 41 10 44 5 60 46 8 73 8 20 34 1 64 22 1 29 6 3 17 18 4 1 24 2 4 5 9 3 1 7 9 36 30 58 78 29 13 65 99 54 43 33 76 66 26 62 106 53 126 173 226 271 244 85 200 576 69 234 144 237 188 139 249 134 59 74 256 232 205 169 88 140 507 47 183 172 196 137 130 147 257 278 81 446 286 148 146 272 231 407 29 197 271 285 117 126 120 112 138. 3 95 73 1 12 105 23 31 Amite 4 37 2 13 10 4 39 5 6 Madison .... 59 3 Attala 3 2 14 4 8 13 4 51 19 22 8 11 20 1 4 4 " 5 Calhoun Monroe 14 6 Carroll Neshoba.. .. 7 Chickasaw Choctaw 1 8 19 <) Oktibbeha..., 10 10 Clark 1 11 IS Copiah Pike 10 28 19 3 2 1 13 8 2 17 17 10 14 Do Soto 3 15 Ifi 2 17 la Harrison 8 23 6 92 99 11 62 2 68 46 48 78 29 49 21 40 82 1 589 45 322 21 180 219 26lJ 397 225 245 1 75 116 4 454 10 173 40 72 195 296 940 184 196 4 352 327 40 265 4 206 161 27 257 267 227 189 176 97 64 41 5 3 25 10 17 1 Sunflower* 19 Hinds Tallahatchie 17 39 28 2 15 39 231 84 4 29 81 814 549 20 47 92 608 496 10 43 143 333 312 57 186 21 22 7 18 55 3 sn 9 1 27 3 01 Issaquena Tishomingo 2 90 Itawamba P.1 21 94 Jasper 15 67 1 28. Washington* 95 9 23 37 31 28 69 62 245 157 68 27 60 220 178 66 40 171 207 288 240 2 53 15 45 95 9fi 14 8 8 3 8 4 9 23 •.•7 Kemper 26 25 14 10 8 4 9 3 1 "Winston. *" W \ 5 9 99 Lauderdale Yazoo 40 30 Total 563 2,516 10, 967 9,204 11, 408 1,868 481 *Ko retorna. MISSOURI. 207 TARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. COUNTIES. Adair Andrew Atchison Audrain Barry Barton Bates Benton Bollinger Boone Buchanan , Butler Caldwell Callaway Camden Cape Girardeau. , Carroll CasB Carter Cedar Chariton Christian Clark Clay Clinton , Cole Cooper , Crawford Dade , Dallas Daviess DeEalb Dent , Douglas Dunklin Franklin Gasconade Gentry Greene Grundy Harrison Henry Hickory Holt Howard Howell Iron Jackson Jasper Jefferson Johnson Knox Laclede Lafayette Lawrence Lewis Lincoln Linn ACRES. 10 3 22 9 13 4 2 55 23 36 20 29 23 18 5 42 5 19 8 44 44 18 25 11 6 25 23 24 6 43 27 38 5 3 1 5 38 1 13 24 6 14 2 60 4 10 2 10 1 11 56 10 39 64 39 33 66 18 18 174 135 104 47 63 35 92 58 162 24 28 24 165 120 76 56 29 25 130 129 111 79 79 106 40 99 80 73 257 196 133 72 78 100 31 87 19 65 100 43 91 33 21 58 19 53 126 66 365 197 215 242 67 135 428 418 342 334 105 185 371 196 722 229 261 66 368 401 208 344 209 161 409 373 265 285 213 435 218 256 109 ISO 1,046 604 442 427 394 479 260 194 123 235 133 153 334 194 634 393 213 114 277 224- 230 434 354 216 376 142 256 175 37 151 227 217 415 445 37 157 390 100 442 213 309 24 204 303 122 311 243 210 194 325 143 211 179 274 193 96 33 63 348 155 371 362 260 290 260 162 128 296 31 88 331 194 209 473 290 99 319 238 277 397 289 140 139 94 315 62 17 HI 114 48 644 379 17 131 563 31 170 203 282 6 86 234 60 240 418 351 46 100 121 242 97 40 8 39 128 32 185 257 126 144 276 61 89 483 4 37 472 143 58 382 247 65 501 131 367 410 133 35 6 1 1 21 27 8 1 1 2 5 3 30 1 8 10 10 1 10 59 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 COUNTIES. Livingston . Macon Madison — Maries Marion McDonald . . Mercer MUler Moniteau Monroe Montgomery Morgan New Madrid Newton Nodaway Oregon Osage Ozark Pemiscot Perry Pettis ,. Phelps Pike Platte Polk Pulaski Putnam EaUs Randolph Ray Reynolds Ripley St. Charles St. Clair St, Francois Ste. Genevieve . St. Loiiia Saline Schuyler Scotland Scott Shannon Shelby Stoddard Stone Sullivan Taney Texas Vernon Warren Washington Wayne Webster Wright Total., ACRES. 24 36 34 3 54 43 12 6 27 35 27 3 8 8 87 32 17 24 3 23 11 14 4 1 10 3 17 47 19 4 12 128 14 10 27 22 60 54 106 21 9 10 20 18 13 2,428 59 170 11 120 22 31 262 131 56 81 56 67 81 18 42 56 240 77 78 73 30 60 56 84 62 22 98 32 53 144 92 34 57 27 64 91 284 76 96 38 27 133 66 78 63 141 108 154 74 79 73 82 78 64 9,110 237 600 105 308 156 142 603 333 139 488 327 330 307 100 244 70 146 544 129 143 470 221 165 329 498 289 129 430 194 336 525 179 131 523 205 263 403 783 254 329 224 196 231 329 325 121 459 221 257 245 448 311 270 278 213 33, 620 440 129 140 275 168 106 304 473 285 174 93 167 97 45 170 31 56 327 209 105 409 77 280 261 356 428 54 68 391 137 178 199 402 276 247 259 114 23 244 136 51 259 .67 105 163 290 149 126 159 124 244 61 40 367 30 125 51 103 206 574 251 100 106 87 47 9 53 9 25 76 272 60 532 415 165 25 135 323 432 347 16 18 261 82 78 66 263 429 98 220 41 7 189 39 15 161 9 18 66 176 74 49 58 21 22 1 15 10 1 14 4 8 2 1 13 24,336 18, 497 466 208 NEW HAMPSHIRE— NEW JERSii.x FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. NC:\ir HAMPSHIRi:. COUNTIES. ACRES. 7 8 9 10 COUNTIES. ACRES. 1 8 § 1 o 1 T-l 1 g s t-T 1 1 1 o 1 i-T 1 1 1 § o 1 1 8 f i o i -7 1 1 i o 1 1 37 64 54 7 144 135 119 124 130 76 222 233 516 877 454 436 1,117 895 785 1,013 1,005 629 2,006 1,475 511 510 1,105 365 1,774 1,155 7 3 9 2 2 8 1 2 Merrimack Rockingham Strafford 91 210 77 40 246 450 173 82 902 1,372 647 368 1,498 1,369 732 826 1,252 688 458 941 9 1 2 3 Cheshire Sullivan 5 5 Total Hillgborougli 859 1,855 7,584 11,338 8,759 45 4 NEir JERSEY. ACRES. ACRES. d Q. COUNTIES. s H fe COUNTIES. s if3 g K u "§ § •d i 1 a -d ■d o ■d •a -d a 1 13 1 1 m 12 13 14 n m ^ 1 2 57 70 34 165 151 108 602 394 55 611 674 8 191 739 Middlesex 31 41 91 84 197 211 394 542 720 668 551 768 333 543 415 1 2 1 1 o Bei'gen Monmouth 3 Burlington 1 1 4 Camden 8 58 19 108 175 203 273 123 220 30 15 16 17 55 54 112 200 333 152 140 96 1 1 R fi Cumberland Essex 57 186 88 56 60 46 134 252 127 70 151 102 434 463 353 68 454 224 427 141 444 29 1,213 522 132 40 318 17 772 461 2 17 18 19 20 21 Salem 19 1 18 91 7 82 64 63 170 40 302 351 231 359 228 552 709 630 246 595 471 664 839 60 709 7 1 5 1 1 1 8 Gloucester Hudson 1 Sussex . 9 10 Hunterdon Mercer 1 Total 11 1,059 2,390 7,138 0,652 7,198 17 6 NEW YORK. 209 FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. COUNTIES. Albany Allegany Broome Cattaraugus - Cayuga Chautauqua . Chemung Chenango . , . Clinton Columbia Cortland Delaware Dutchess Erie Essex Franklin Fulton G-reene Hamilton Herkimer . . . . Jefferson Kings Lewis Livingston . . . Madison Monroe Montgomery . New York Niagara Onoida ACRES. 45 137 80 249 24 140 120 55 43 51 54 247 45 58 16 72 32 9 51 84 66 73 44 119 269 33 99 59 119 195 336 146 370 224 451 71 24.? 278 118 160 199 142 667 88 266 48 184 235 52 185 107 274 354 54 9 218 537 a o •a o 504 1,593 907 1,568 1,231 1,835 527 1,046 1,038 311 721 1,077 390 2,444 585 1,305 333 654 460 103 643 1,542 170 881 623 995 1,218 192 7 1,052 1,336 1,576 1,107 1,501 1,890 2,129 693 1,183 1,900 892 1,913 808 1,063 646 1,151 1,081 109 1,001 2,320 110 873 1,037 1,506 1,769 744 1 1,268 2,421 985 850 581 915 1,024 1,219 334 1,532 587 1,734 686 1,736 1,857 941 697 408 565 782 883 58 1,151 1,907 118 582 988 963 1,010 969 2 658 5 7 4 4 5 7 3 2 19 6 4 1 1 9 1 1 28 1 4 ■2 COUNTIES. Onondaga — Ontario Orange Orleans Oswego Otsego Putnam Queens Bensselaer ... Richmond — Rockland St. Lawrence Saratoga Schenectady. Schoharie Schuyler Seneca Steuben Suffolk Sullivan Tioga Tompkins — Ulster Warren Washington . Wayne Westchester . Wyoming Yates Total ACRES. 174 55 25 105 175 141 30 204 37 9 3 67 160 38 81 175 161 60 18 121 33 40 75 226 40 32 5,232 435 133 74 109 495 291 77 407 78 35 40 435 159 56 119 156 105 296 506 367 142 113 238 73 110 201 290 127 93 12, 310 1,474 644 419 585 2,354 1,214 285 927 497 104 342 2,602 724 208 634 640 405 2,137 1,199 1,286 925 817 1,093 537 508 1,361 856 1,033 449 54, 502 73,037 1,095 1,092 1,359 557 472 1,730 361 262 1,110 31 78 1,887 1,173 357 981 437 525 1,133 309 307 436 595 897 376 1,509 738 849 820 538 50, 132 225 21 27 210 NORTH CAROLINA. FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. COUNTIES. Alamance . . . Alexander. .. Alleghany... Anaon Ashe Beaufort Bertie Bladen Brunswick . . Buncombe . . . Burke Cabarras CaldweU .... Camden Carteret Caswell Catawba Chatham Cherokee Chowan Cleveland - . . Columbus . . - Craven Cumberland . Currituck . . . Davidson DaviQ Duplin Edgecombe. . Forsyth Franklin Gaston Gates Grauville Greene Guilford Halifax Harnett Haywood - . . Henderson . . Hertford Hyde Iredell Jackson ACRES. 1 43 5 4 39 126 53 18 208 20 2 10 18 36 7 i 8 40 24 20 16 55 61 21 12 10 8 54 8 1 8 20 16 27 11 34 14 4 27 8 7 16 32 41 15 101 18 24 87 179 71 54 207 71 17 31 39 43 27 6 57 75 143 59 38 115 127 44 35 40 25 81 33 74 23 37 26 46 18 44 27 20 27 fi-1 18 27 70 75 113 320 95 196 307 233 197 187 153 288 223 190 178 99 60 32 445 522 464 132 359 224 239 232 196 534 149 ^5 147 482 88 314 127 275 81 227 126 114 159 298 109 100 432 305 285 194 104 198 141 136 34 277 154 310 183 94 26 116 357 529 222 71 374 105 122 192 146 621 176 204 174 445 164 313 139 342 97 460 165 141 122 232 91 58 395 126 448 105 123 279 170 79 209 156 40 296 140 122 26 460 209 557 106 76 272 135 122 164 129 391 192 329 368 198 332 139 238 590 213 700 343 184 105 131 202 99 304 41 1 39 6 5 38 12 2 4 1 11 7 12 4 66 2 15 13 4 2 4 13 19 58 1 17 55 13 38 49 7 31 6 10 3 1 5 1 1 35 4 1 7 13 4 10 19 2 1 1 8 1 2 COUNTIES. Johnson Jones Lenoir Lincoln Macon Madison Martin McDowell Mecklenburg . . Montgomery... Moore Nash New Hanover . Northampton.. Onslow Orange Pasquotank . . . Perquimans ... Person Pitt Polk Randolph Richmond Robeson Rockingham... Rowan Rutherford Sampson '. Stanly Stokes Surry Tyrrel Union Wake Warren Washington . . . Watauga Wayne Wilkes Wilson Yadkin Yancey Total. ACRES. 38 4 11 8 33 30 71 6 57 24 38 18 23 38 4 12 12 9 1 24 3 13 1 14 11 17 47 10 17 32 27 29 24 6 26 2 19 81 2,050 11 26 38 96 61 97 11 64 75 70 34 97 51 57 73 43 C8 18 55 38 39 14 70 28 58 28 48 62 63 90 39 39 83 23 69 121 22' 93 23 39 196 4,879 373 50 77 241 244 183 210 157 481 364 580 158 180 167 142 541 159 141 111 257 137 466 179 296 164 378 259 280 395 345 321 114 349 433 89 120 383 110 611 122 206 444 30, 882 341 47 90 103 183 124 130 166 325 214 330 182 124 212 103 456 106 88 153 251 80 719 185 353 228 368 257 399 384 161 243 65 319 450 116 74 110 165 375 164 303 219 18, 496 118 236 132 74 92 187 87 399 146 183 384 177 338 156 297 138 103 313 358 64 463 269 409 396 463 188 394 187 116 188 49 211 581 253 50 59 317 217 199 174 108 15 29 27 4 2 3 12 2 9 1 2 16 14 34 17 6 18 34 30 18 2 4 19 9 24 12 2 24 2 4 5 4 2 45 51 6 1 38 2 11 3 19, 230 1,184 OHIO. 211 FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. COUNTIES. Adams AUen Ashland Ashtabula . . . Athens Auglaize Belmont Brown Butler Carroll Champaign - Clark Clermont Clinton Columbiana . Coshocton - , , Crawford Cuyahoga ... Darlie Defiance Delaware . . - Erie Fairfield Fayette Franklin Fulton Gallia Geauga Greene Guernsey . . . Hamilton Hancock Hardin Harrison Henry Highland . . . Hocking Holmes Huron Jackson .. ... Jefferson Knox Lake Lawrence Licking ACKES. 33 4a 4 4 21 20 24 21 46 6 7 61 109 8 32 14 18 125 17 18 5 26 18 10 78 28 31 3 6 H 538 1 21 5 54 15 40 18 40 42 27 47 14 31 77 94 145 46 77 95 129 55 115 93 24 37 63 192 100 112 40 70 407 123 112 49 111 01 15 208 115 82 13 37 27 613 68 106 9 142 42 145 81 183 93 50 86 65 151 137 476 821 457 719 657 960 450 695 432 242 336 330 778 718 580 424 642 1,238 1,064 565 590 40S 492 116 867 624 584 217 284 364 1,157 768 558 171 470 518 797 501 1,087 609 192 477 350 495 g 1 s 8 1 a ? ■a 8 755 517 611 184 1,043 566 1,023 650 731 374 487 118 965 686 961 528 1,022 797 753 755 663 565 535 546 1,057 498 776 497 1,168 588 852 707 908 383 983 450 1,082 346 311 87 876 460 516 350 938 762 327 546 84P 635 513 130 514 334 713 585 683 565 938 ,769 839 366 957 317 407 152 635 721 138 35 926 725 629 285 883 650 1,173 502 524 324 508 664 1,054 706 540 357 280 155 1,296 980, COUNTIES. Logan Lorain Lucas Madiso . . Mahoning . Marion Medina Mercer Miami Monroe - Montgomery . Morgan Morrow Muskingum . . Noble Ottawa Paulding Perry Pickaway — Pike Portage Preble Putnam Richland Ross Sandusky Scioto Seneca Shelby Stark Summit Trumbull Tuscarawas . . Union Van Wert Vinton "Warren Washington . . Wayne Williams Wood Wj^andott ACRES. 19 27 136 5 10 59 39 23 31 32 57 150 3 16 24 18 44 6 30 8 55 9 28 46 13 51 6 17 12 29 14 36 10 9 21 83 26 70 157 115 193 195 29 93 98 137 51 242 74 252 211 58 80 59 74 110 95 59 75 134 206 70 121 41 96 95 141 76 94 93 40 165 206 76 107 431 54 87 282 9,928 1,146 661 215 566 495 935 464 971 540 1,206 610 616 636 372 662 293 214 425 374 463 757 263 657 643 404 422 444 846 741 638 537 815 603 664 617 332 425 1,415 464 710 894 504 52, 356 796 1,112 311 292 971 510 1,084 512 491 1,010 853 1,185 975 994 973 790 154 73 802 562 329 1, 149 738 374 1,258 673 546 398 1,240 663 1,247 846 1,180 1,027 658 274 363 818 964 1,292 540 500 481 66, 350 425 484 103 437 574 364 477 220 95 498 374 635 440 442 913 489 67 16 611 605 238 750 567 115 714 802 194 217 534 197 .845 664 815 791 277 63 241 685 396 846 108 144 261 2 18 4 3 12 5 4 4 20 6 7 5 1 2 42 3 y 2 7 W 7 1 40, 699 212 OREGON — RHODE ISLAND. FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. OBEOON. COUNTIES. ACRES. iH n 1 1 s 1 1 s i 1 i s 1 § 1 1 1 1 1 1 5 14 46 40 188 61 11 3 Coos 3 Clackamas 17 6 24 11 95 7 11 4 25 3 4 3 16 25 87 34 6 18 36 99 20 174 3 18 5 132 21 25 21 101 156 78 93 8 42 71 159 83 62 6 5 2 107 26 33 28 91 180 17 63 2 33 28 87 78 27 20 16 1 5 3 4 Clatsop.. S Colnmbia a 7 DouglaB 81 98 55 253 566 311 7 285 2 89 11 130 198 4 12 fi 2 3 2 9 in Lane.... ._ 32 92 20 18 1 3 n 2 16 57 13 7 19 28 89 1 15^ Marion 13 Multnomah 14 Polk 43 5 15 Tillamook Ifi Umpqua 15 3 17 18 WasMngton 1 54 1«l 5 300 50i' 1,236 888 2,337 342 47 RHODX: XSIiAND. COUNTIES. ACRES. i 1 CQ 1 cj 1 1 1 s i 1 S o 8 ■a i 1 Bristol 53 11 102 81 14 66 65 147 223 51 63 283 335 772 287 54 299 323 733 438 30 152 148 257 466 2 Keift 1 4 3 Newport 4 Providence 5 ■Washington .' 6 Total 261 552 1,740 1,747 1,053 11 PENNSYLVANIA. 213 FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. ACRES. 5 I 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 IG 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 COUNTIES. AdamB Allegheny Armstrong ... Beaver Bedford Berks Blair Bradford Bucks Butler Cambria Carbon Centre Chester Clarion Clearfield ... Clinton Columbia Crawford . . . Cumberland . Dauphin Delaware - . . Elk Erie Fayette Forest Franklin Fulton Greene Huntingdon . Indiana Jefferson Jnniata Lancaster . . . 18 285 24 22 4 181 6 149 368 15 13 216 120 29 12 20 101 21 120 85 15 79 9 6 23 10 20 4 59 80 11 482 140 378 81 105 43 678 21 310 39 6 567 173 84 41 78 449 88 162 176 132 324 37 8 90 50 24 25 202 188 379 1,312 685 617 347 1,543 127 2,126 1,774 1,336 622 161 71 1,200 639 578 239 487 2,407 276 499 406 265 1,782 304 10 324 238 411 238 917 558 238 1,289 1,651 1,279 1,025 854 1,528 306 2,140 2,109 1,667 551 156 364 1,862 906 635 255 828 1,884 701 734 454 64 1,654 890 18 ■676 374 813 704 1,499 566 328 2,441 942 904 590 509 788 1,428 435 826 653 697 132 51 627 1,298 466 215 202 434 573 1,018 759 297 17 576 802 6 1,379 325 796 794 711 157 315 1,633 COUNTIES. 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54. 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 Lawrence Lebanon Lehigh Luzerne Lycoming McKean Mercer Mifflin Monroe Montgomery Montour Northampton Northumberland. Perry Philadelphia Pike Potter Schuylkill Snyder Somerset Sullivan Susquehanna Tioga Union Venango Warren Washington Wayne Westmoreland... Wyoming York. ACRES. Total.. 7 34 95 44 17 61 20 38 3 392 3 60 41 17 352 18 65 203 2 3 12 6 11 29 52 21 58 4 147 4,821 35 159 386 218 94 116 141 71 22 883 16 239 109 76 359 45 196 294 21 118 156 56 231 196 109 648 204 33 491 12, 343 465 348 812 1,281 466 409 1,168 167 258 1,801 101 725 344 415 486 231 502 663 231 283 334 1,268 1,235 172 1,238 688 471 1,480 741 531 1,425 45,234 924 598 943 1,329 812 151 1,527 291 426 1,733 256 977 739 671 348 169 284 742 514 645 168 1,687 1,036 285 908 425 1,435 716 1,839 550 1,806 369 531 476 453 511 48 552 476 210 493 198 497 688 517 87 61 62 338 317 1,125 35 671 359 335 317 126 1,670 186 1,431 164 1,265 37,624 35,923 61 15 2ii SOUTH CAROLINA. FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. DISTRICTS. Abbeville Anderson Bai'nwell Beaufort Charleston Chester Chesterfield .... Clarendon Colleton Darlhigton Edgefield , Pan-field Georgetown — Greenville Horry — Kershaw Lancaster Laurens Lexington Marion Marlborough . . . Newberry Orangeburgh... Pickens Richland Spartauburgb . . Sumter Union Williamsburgb . York Total. ACRES. 3 13 5 34 10 1 1 14 10 1 25 58 53 1 2 3 II 6 3 7 18 20 22 4 15 4 352 17 29 29 23 85 15 8 34 46 31 54 2 37 79 127 23 43 10 76 48 16 30 37 67 3 76 62 31 1,219 156 438 194 139 153 90 174 155 403 178 320 27 56 416 264 114 283 84 621 301 127 159 143 377 36 505 228 184 173 199 6,695 474 328 174 99 155 175 134 283 216 378 86 38 432 151 99 223 244 348 317 165 189 349 431 38 459 169 199 153 287 6,980 664 482 697 400 317 427 224 220 286 333 763 425 73 171 222 790 272 473 256 426 573 398 85 527 330 327 215 646 11,3 74 26 15 1 114 32, 120 56 87 35 65 29 10 5 33 12 14 3 , 56 25 145 26 96 46 33,. 7 15 1 3 1 31 11 23 4 117 24 8 1 21 8 24 16 23 11 58 22 10 16 25 7 5 62 26 35 8 23 6 21 10 482 TENNESSEE, 215 FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. ACRES. COUNTIES. Anderson . . . . Bedford Benton Bledsoe Blount Bradley Campbell Gannon Carroll Carter Clieatbam . . . Claiborne Cocke Coffee Cumberland . Davidson Decatnr DeKalb Dickson Dyer Fayette Fentress Franklin Gibson Giles Grainger Greene Grundy Hamilton Hancock Hardeman... Hardin Hawkins Haywood Henderson... Henry Hickman Humphreys . Jackson JefForson Johnson Knox Lauderdale ■ . 6 11 26 1 3 9 4 12 9 2 15 36 16 35 4 16 26 36 147 15 8 29 12 33 11 4 40 4 1 27 2 25 13 15 78 2 44 25 2 12 30 65 72 3 16 26 49 262 41 16 43 85 125 154 25 67 46 147 183 67 29 121 125 105 130 17 72 37 18 5 13 244 22 85 150 106 117 252 213 54 18 ■ 34 40 198 579 318 25 169 171 208 454 370 190 265 255 415 264 109 347 214 313 312 266 160 234 358 632 381 121 317 123 104 137 216 348 115 263 456 496 244 365 347 277 140 292 149 209 420 233 68 359 308 124 263 475 182 164 233 292 198 89 273 160 248 241 203 182 131 257 579 3D5 235 629 67 183 175 280 237 220 247 406 472 234 245 236 393 142 507 113 152 676 104 109 431 293 103 127 310 102 105 218 204 216 32 410 100 148 154 126 474 92 286 335 566 274 622 42 211 128 313 175 371 318 286 373 143 90 195 455 97 439 125 5 28 1 25 3 1 2 14 9 48 11 11 3 7 1 34 4 19 58 12 9 1 1 13 COUNTIES. Lawrence Lewis Lincoln McNary Macon McMinn Madison Marion Marshall " Maury Meigs , Monroe Montgomery. Morgan Obion Overton Perry Polk Putnam Rhea Roane Robertson . . . Rutherford . - Scott Sevier Sequatchie . - Shelby Smith Stewart Sullivan Sumner Tipton Union Vau Buron . . Warren Washington . Wayne Weakley White Williamson.. Wilson ACRES. Total. 3 76 16 7 3 7 12 13 46 6 25 3 44 8 42 39 14 1 23 33 5 17 11 42 11 18 1 38 5 1,687 84 16 352 45 250 23 125 28 37 334 14 84 88 68 182 41 31 24 312 26 15 65 121 16 99 19 64 309 105 14 106 49 19 13 34 51 160 59 31 127 78 7,245 392 73 508 418 303 145 461 74 482 575 71 315 266 197 555 249 142 83 263 64 137 331 416 144 299 50 199 344 273 141 473 221 135 43 178 255 350 573 219 32,998 231 54 546 397 205 397 398 90 375 511 141 380 278 71 287 364 163 102 244 88 291 410 419 90 300 58 205 397 178 323 436 181 193 63 251 420 206 432 280 409 659 22,829 26 574 267 128 434 437 135 351 656 146 405 377 44 144 270 83 99 170 137 363 409 570 25 174 53 381 403 125 387 460 164 123 61 305 461 162 234 217 496 829 21, 903 38 4 11 44 7 15 24 1 9 28 6 3 4 1 5 12 14 46 3 2 55. 9 3 7 14 23 1 7 5 2 1 3 44 2-1 921 158 2.16 TEXAS. FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. COUNTIES.- ACRES. 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 113 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 ISO 131 123 123 124 125 136 COUNTIES. ACRES. o CO i a o 8 P i o d 3 1 e •a d s u 1 1 I 8 1 a § s o 1 1 1 1 o 1 8 1 1 1 s 1 a 1 o s 13 3 'd 1 % O •a 1 1 11 06 7 59 3 51 79 193 29 198 12 175 305 232 44 283 12 175 213 42 18 102 8 91 159 27 4 130 2 96 4 1 7 4 5 24 39 14 33 150 45 13 140 33 17 302 34 1 49 s n 3 Atascosa Hays 4 13 5 Haskell* ■i Bandcrah 9 1 23 2 3 6 4 10 8 3 6 75 60 34 112 97 66 ■ 14 31 40 17 37 121 117 62 370 329 215 15 44 90 16 72 74 10 49 143 127 103 4 34 55 4 48 40 3 41 60 103 20 3 6 8 7 Baylor* Hill 2 1 6 R Bee 1 6 8 33 4 1 3 12 2 3 6 19 5 5 18 1 21 7 4 38 29 57 14 30 10 36 4 6 56 44 42 3 119 30 30 46 10 107 30 58 35 71 34 70 1 2 82 24 20 18 60 24 30 2 50 32 16 14 102 72 33 q BeU 4 2 1 in Bexar Hunt 11 Blanco T> 40 54 4 3 3 11 Bowie 5 18 4 4 1 14 15 Brazos 16 ifi Brown Jones* 17 5 53 21 70 46 146 10 177 18 44 7 17 69 62 17 16 144 36 10 50 9 IR Burleson 164 78 138 3 149 182 32 289 84 34 82 48 135 12 254 7 1 1 1 7 1 8 1 1 2 25 3 11 Burnet Kerr on Caldwell Kimble* 51 Calhoun 2 7 o=> Cameron '1 CasB 36 7 87 12 271 18 141 10 79 10 1 94 Chambers Lampassas -...- 95 Cherokee "fi Clav* 45 3 63 20 1 27 156 40 60 120 6 15 221 154 69 186 11 31 94 94 27 80 1 10 70 101 33 39 5 6 3 3 97 CoUohan* 98 Collin 8 58 309 188 105 Liberty 9fl Coleman* 2 ,in Colorado 12 61 7 77 144 16 146 195 13 64 57 8 88 24 7 10 1 Live Oak. . . 31 Comal 3a Comanche McCuUoch* . . 13 Concho* McLennan McMulIen* 31 63 143 63 74 6 34 Coolt 43 10 14 118 38 69 125 57 243 38 42 206 17 24 149 1 35 Coryell 17 1 9 11 35 4 18 13 72 29 7 9 37 27 5 8 39 69 1 35 3fi Dallas 2 10 1 37 Dawson* 38 Demmit* Matagorda 14 3 39 Denton 2 83 41 109 132 130 66 60 14 67 4n DeWitt 10 4 11 26 159 29 7 41 Duval* 42 Eastland* Milam 7 3 6 47 28 9 5 4 45 6 50 8 62 13 29 164 65 43 9 19 39 28 117 22 128 10 69 435 163 93 24 30 59 ■ 213 165 81 83 2 44 174 80 45 17 3 13 180 46 91 51 2 43 Edwards* 44 Ellis 16 72 53 54 160 31 120 9 64 12 Montgomery Nacogdoches 77 ni 99 39 7 6 7 153 18 123 7 3 1 45 El Paso 1 4B Ensinal* 47 Erath 111 7 3 24 3 1 68 32 80 153 14 54 44 62 261 291 37 137 9 35 195 166 17 92 8 36 119 184 74 126 48 Falls 1 3 19 15 5 1 4 1 2 49 Fannin 50 Fayette 51 Port Bend 7 1 9 5S Freestone 53 Frio* Polk 54 Galveston 5 43 16 31 7 9 15 1 13 145 34 87 77 40 68 1 24 128 73 227 261 149 137 3 6 9 22 113 176 102 76 1 7 3 35 110 101 167 94 1 Presidio* . 55 Gillespie 14 17 10 52 27 36 160 26* 76 124 10 41 117 10 61 10 2 3 2 1 3 ifi Goliad 1 8 14 11 1 3 4 )7 Gonzales 58 Grayson Runnels* i9 Grimes 13 2 7 7 1 66 36 18 15 13 335 68 83 23 10 316 58 50 2 9 308 33 58 4 2 13 3 10 3 30 Guadalupe Plamilton Sabiuo 11 San Augustine San Patricio San Saba 3 33 Hardeman* ii3 Hardin 4 17 42 G 5 TEXAS— VERMONT. 217 FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. T X: X A 8— Continued. ACKES. ACEES. o rf ^ c3 d g COUNTIES. s " g fe s COUNTIES. s c« u •^ fe s •§ "d i 1 ^ s '•1 •§ ^ 1 1 g •o o § 1 1 1 •0 s o 1 8 1 i o g i g m *"• 141 142 CO m T-< 197 Shackleford 1 114 26 3 48 46 94 31 87 44 107 13 10 128 Shelby 7 101 215 65 1 1 "Walker 129 71 594 Washington Webb 20 4 lan Starr 39 11 9 6 3 1 2 144 145 146 2 7 128 Til Tarrant* Wharton 7 15 7 46 15 95 45 72 9 4 Iff? Taylor* Williamson 1J!3 Throckmorton* 147 148 149 "Wise 11 6 47 60 1 66 150 8 21 70 5 4 31 6 134 Titus 84 14 113 46 316 123 216 66 107 131 o 10 1 3 "Wood ISS Travis Young 13fi Trinity 3 57 141 46 30 150 2 10 9 3 2 137 Tyler 15 9 3 9 91 133 7 63 157 387 18 136 78 233 6 46 39 180 151 13R Upshur _.. 4 Total Uvalde 134 1,832 6,156 14,132 7,857 6,831 468 140 VanZandt 14 1 87 *Na returns. TERMOIVT. COUNTIES. ACRES. 1 • s CO 1 1 s i 1 1 •a § 1 1 i 1 Addison 44 27 7 61 7 23 2 5 13 21 49 1 4S 13 106 84 49 113 35 132 473 310 423 377 164 498 54 446 513 750 509 595 468 607 697 451 1,025 665 254 823 111 580 1,364 929 789 i,248 1,121 1,645 1,074 596 853 793 218 917 153 370 1,059 506 1,258 762 1,365 1,581 S3 10 3 9 1 9 s 2 3 4 5 7' Grrand Isle ... .«,- 8 Lamoille .- Orange - .... ..................... 78 70 139 119 36 103 94 1 2 1 22 g 10 11 2 12 Wosbington ................................. 13 Windham .*. ., 5 6 1 321 1,158 6,187 11,702 11, 505 92 11 28 218 VIRGINIA. FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. COUNTIES. Accomack Albemarle Alexandria Alleghany Amelia Amherst Appomattox.. - AuguBta Barbour Bath Bedford Berkeley Boone Botetourt Braxton Brooke Brunswick Buchanan Buckingham.. - Cabell ■.. Calhoun Campbell Caroline Carroll Clay Charles City . . - Charlotte Chesterfield Clarke Craig Culpeper Cumberland . . . DLnwiddie Doddridge Elizabeth City . Essex Fairfax Fauquier Fayette Floyd Fluvanna Franklin Frederick Gilmer Giles Gloucester Goochland Grayson Greenbrier Greenville Greene Halifax Hampshire Hancock Hardy Hanover Harrison Henrico Henry Highland Isle of Wight.. Jackson James City ACRES. 44 1 16 1 6 12 14 30 62 9 62 29 17 12 5 1 27 11 10 22 2 3 50 22 34 2 9 13 6 46 2 3 26 22 23 11 32 5 21 23 60 14 1 16 3 4 7 23 17 12 18 14 55 108 20 17 a 89 10 113 16 12 69 28 38 07 20 30 37 69 6 12 65 2 ,2 17 3 20 68 12 17 53 27 135 28 28 60 10 92 1 15 9 44 50 1 27 19 45 16 3 27 59 92 74 18 34 37 6 303 66 28 56 33 101 46 192 337 41 262 19 212 60 229 43 52 138 97 154 136 82 77 216 117 23 59 172 16 31 48 26 63 315 40 63 166 94 334 185 89 379 57 186 64 81 40 227 235 12 126 78 156 43 74 105 223 161 257 46 178 268 18 326 176 40 82 55 161 90 357 283 53 394 75 59 141 116 127 87 55 99 137 44 121 116 189 16 45 79 143 35 79 61 33 126 119 38 nj 249 108 154 238 .123 434 163 98 120 85 97 243 247 13 92 185 248 122 149 167 295 128 185 64 314 221 28 284 576 30 91 250 346 240 873 234 101 603. 434 26 283 35 182 435 10 359 116 22 410 389 169 1 105 345 329 204 106 346 269 313 53 59 209 323 565 75 197 304 562 495 34 180 179 220 203 403 133 173 582 613 150 220 400 410 207 217 179 235 96 35 25 28 40 7 7 54 9 16 2 1 44 14 33 11 4 1 16 74 38 29 1 77 36 36 1 5 42 12 117 1 17 28 20 3 21 33 7 18 32 5 113 29 23 60 10 18 15 15 10 3 33 12 23 1 4 13 4' 3 15 14, 1 15 33 10 10 14 6 1 4 5 7 2 90 91 92 99 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 103 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 130 121 122 123 124 125 126 COUNTIES. Jefferson Kanawha King George King and Queen . King William Lancaster Lee Lewis Logan Loudon Louisa Lunenburg Madison Marshall Marion Mason Matthews McDowell Mecklenburg Mercer Middlesex Montgomery Monongalia Monroe Morgan Nansemond Nelson New Kent Nicholas Norfolk Northampton Noi-thumberland . Nottoway Ohio Orange Page Patrick Pendleton Pittsylvania ..*.. Pleasants Pocahontas Powhatan Preston Prince Edward . . Prince George . . . Prince William . . Princess Anne - . . Pulaski Putnam Raleigh Randolph Rappahannock . . Richmond Rockingham Ritchie Roane Roanoke Rockbridge Russell Scott Sheu-indoah Smyth Southampton ACRES. 3 5 1 1 17 13 12 2 73 5 16 14 25 3 91 1 33 34 12 64 34 9 29 8 7 25 11 25 30 8 13 3 1 1 12 13 7 21 19 14 57 3 33 3 23 44 2 10 15 13 2 2 5 4 76 10 9 24 21 29 16 138 16 14 25 19 12 107 44 74 63 63 116 24 44 11 43 18 51 19 14 83 71 21 18 3 4 1 19 53 17 47 53 34 9 106 6 8 21 25 9 106 10 53 11 72 101 22 17 17 56 53 7 3 22 310 46 105 100 77 145 106 244 94 71 87 81 167 410 126 133 71 143 286 38 123 159 204 68 188 85 68 234 212 36 133 28 39 20 133 309 118 121 33 421 45 48 98 370 40 240 -81 122 48 94 448 344 193 61 98 231 2:39 34 55 71 67 135 68 109 85 88 201 177 78 221 115 115 96 310 412 106 74 16 1.53 213 49 168 433 230 107 193 111 90 161 301 81 135 28 113 55 138 215 163 476 82 118 54 422 70 78 136 263 59 132 57 102 114 134 447 167 90 79 189 214 348 129 116 140 356 104 I60' 394 277 123 387 146 27 826 430 333 244 219 276 108 30 6 286 132 93 207 335 329 128 226 281 134 113 158 252 151 206 175 243 246 205 258 767 37 130 189 315 318 198 291 188 143 63 37 135 248 152 835 105 56 181 493 224 261 309 192 355 12 3 32 51 29 6 6 36 65 33 38 2 3 6 6 58 6 12 19 6 28 3 46 9 1 3 3 15 66 1 46 4 3 13 62 1 15 35 3 46 14 26 2 17 4 20 38 9 13 1 17 35 24 13 43 VIRGINIA— WISCONSIN. 219 FARMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. VIRGIIVXA— €anti«ued. 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 COUNTIES. Spottsylvania., Stafford Surry Sussex T.lylor Tazewell Tucker Tyler Upshur Warwick WaiTen Wasliiugton - . ACRES. 16 3 3r 17 1 32 9 2 100 1 8 29 17 47 24 7 81 15 11 12 11 82 77 126 43 57 230 63 154 293 21 43 204 118 124 77 71 136 208 43 196 170 23 98 340 300 243 132 335 124 221 26 156 134 43 240 427 46 12 15 61 4 5 1 1 5 3 12 20 5 11 1 3 1 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 i48 COUNTIES. Wayne Webster Westmoreland Wetzel Wood.., , Wirt Wise Wyoming Wythe York Total ACRES. 13 30 1 61 39 48 51 3 7 23 2,351 85 47 8 138 86 69 73 58 32 63 5,565 278 79 60 326 340 163 199 116 85 111 19, 584 147 22 81 151 223 109 87 48 165 65 72 10 187 71 133 44 43 14 337 41 34 1 32 3 641 1.VISCONSI1V. ' COUNTIES. ACRES. 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 '52 53 54 55 56 57 58 COUNTIES. ACRES. 8 1 B S 1 g i o 1 s s c5 1 E * 1— 1 U 1 s 1 I ES ■a a ■a i s g -d s o P 1 1 s o t-T o Si O 1 6 12 39 6 46 40 7 367 83 117 346 5 590 173 203 243 2 173 53 57 133 2 30 4 12 La Pointe 4 45 48 13 123 15 151 18 3 25 8 15- 47 43 99_ 36 37 2 122 55 178 365 80 19 288 329 24 118 26 96 115 373 164 109 326 2 512 42 640 819 374 28 543 1,104 76 172 39 297 443 585 955 210 949 12 1,880 156 559 1,779 1,200 431 598 917 17 119 9 246 401 136 9 135 353 35 59 16 128 484 148 1,086 89 509 1 594 68 872 718 952 118 225 423 6 2 11 2 46 77 31 5 14 33 2 25 5 37 532 32 86r 39 191 1 58 11 827 96 426 25 57 176 2 2 Manitowoc 4 5 Milwaukie 1 1 Q Burnotte* Monroe 100 1 24 97 4 406 4 38. 216 2] 566 26 31 883 138 73 20 8 778 50 9 13 1 615 15 H Outagamie q 10 7 Pepin 11 Pierce 12 Dallas* Polk 13 22 91 73 4 1 (ff 43 27 60 35 91 1 37 12 17 22 45 19 227 517 80 3 9 38 265 216 139 81 316 58 294 125 '62 386 193 106 1,837 2,156 23 6 38 92 1,289 1,153' 648 484 886 180 1,179 399 476 642 459 474 1,652 1,302 3 1 45 44 1,008 855 693 463 423 88 727 111 413 5 120 477 634 538 2 2 Portage 2 1 14 15 Richland 16 Rock 17 10 18 647 436 625 246 142 23 591 26 351 1 39 328 Saint Croix Sauk 2 19 Fond du Lac Grant -- 12 1 9 2 2 1 1 3 Shawano ^n Sheboygan Trempeleau Walworth 66 4 2" 23 28 48 13 116 10 503 52 57 244 173 235 204 353 22 *>! 22 GrreenLake 5 23 Washington Waukesha 24 3 1 5 2 26 Waushara 27 5 Winnebago Wood 28 29 Total 2 1,983 9,045 30,722 17, 826 9,119 76 * No rcturng. 220 TERRITORIES. FAEMS CONTAINING THREE ACRES AND MORE. SISXKICT OF COIiVmiBIA. ACRES. ^ ^ g s 1 1 1 :3 1 § •a 1 1 1 « 3 a 3 1 rn- 25 36 71 43 57 2 DAKOTA. Total in Territory., 41 SO 31 NEBRASKA. Total in Territory. 533 1,271 419 162 NEVADA. Total in Tcrritory- 11 25 12 35 NBUr MEXICO. Total in Territory. . 1,076 2,140 1,274 207 11 11 VTAHC. Total in Territory.. 531 182 70 TVA8HXNOTON. Total in Territory., 215 230 343 191 271 EE CAPITULATION — 18 60. 221 S^RMS CONTAINING THEEE ACRES AND MORE. STATES. ACRES. 1 s ..« Alabama . California ... Connecticut . Delaware Florida Georgia niinoiB , Indiana Iowa Kentucky. . Looieiana. . Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Missisfiippi Missouri..- New Hampshire . New Jersey New York North Carolina. . . Ohio Oregon Pennsylvania ... R^ode Island ... South Carolina. Tennessee Texas Vermont Virginia Wisconsin Total, States.. TERRITORIES. Columbia, District of. . Dakota Nebraska Nevada New Mexico Utah Washington Total, Territories ■ Aggregate . 1,409 1,823 829 936 63 430 906 1,896 2,535 951 750 1,772 626 1,719 457 2,032 1,549 2,407 563 2,428 859. 1,059 5,232 2,050 3,453 300 4,821 261 352 1,687 1,832 321 2,351 1,983 52, 642 25 41 145 1 1,076 531 215 2,034 54,676 4,379 6,075 1,102 2,081 215 945 2,803 6,518 9,648 4,272 1,916 6,868 2,222 5,435 1,210 4,196 6,608 4,539 2,516 9,110 1,855 2,390 12,310 4,879 9,928 507 12,343 552 1,219 7,245 6,156 1,158 5,565 9,045 16, 049 13,728 2,344 6,898 1,226 3,139 13,644 38,186 49, 664 24, 139 4,714 25,547 4,882 23,838 4, 346 11,765 25,430 8,129 10, 967 33, 620 7,584 7,138 54,50^ 20, 882 52, 356 1,236 45,234 1,740 6,695 22,998 14, 132 6,187 19,584 30, 722 12,060 6,957 2,428 8,477 2,208 1,162 14,129 49,024 42, 076 19,670 2,020 24; 163 3,064 19, 611 6,825 10,, 831 19, 679 2,273 9,204 24,336 li,338 9,652 73, 037 18, 496 66, 350 888 57, 624 1,747 6,980 2B, 829 7,857 11,702 21, 145 17, 826 13,455 4,231 6,541 6,666 2,862 1,432 18,821 45, 532 22, 614 10, 521 70*0 24, 095 4,955 5,061 12, 068 6,703 9,080 649 11,408 18,497 8,759 7,198 50, 132 19,220 40, 699 2,337 35,923 1,053 11, 369 21, 903 6,831 11,505 34,300 9,119 157, 810 612, 245 607, 668 486,239 50 533 11 2,140 1,368 230 4,368 162,178 71 31 1,271 25 1,274 1, 298 343 42 6 419' 12 358 182 191 57 162 35 207 70 271 1,210 802 616, 558 2,016 307 538 39 14 211 2,692 988 267 66 7 1,078 1,161 9 303 29 40 2 1,868 466 45 17 225 1,184, 485 342 61 11 1,359 921 468 92 20,289 2 5 11 696 69 74 10 166 371 2 35 y. -yf^' 4 6 21 311 112 47 15 158 11 641 L 11 !/y-i 5,348 1 2 11 16 608,878 487,041 20, 319 5,364 222 RECAPITULATION — 1850 — i8T{J: FARMS; ACRES OF LAND IN FARMS, (IMPROVED AND UNIMPROVED,) AVERAGE NUMBER OP ACRES TO FARMS, (RECAPITULATION OF 1850-1860;) ALSO, COUNTIES, NUMBER OF, 1860. STATES. NUMRER OF FARMS. ACRES OF LAND IMPROVED IN FARMS. ACRES OF LAND UNIMPROVED IN FARMS. AVERAGE NUMBER OF ACRES TO EACH FARM. NUMBER OP COUNTIES. 1S50. 1S60. 1850. 1S60. 1830. 1860. 18S0. 1860. 1860. 1 41,S64 17,758 872 22,445 6,063 4,304 51, 759 76,208 93, 896 14, 805 55, 1?8 39, 004 18, 716 25. 180 6,658 6,568 62, 003. 143,310 131, 826' 61, 163 1- 10,400 90, 814 17,328 ' 55, 698 25, 494 35, 601 62, 422 18. 181 42, 840, 92, 792 30', 501 27, 646 196, 9» 75, 2p'3" lj^j^839 5^806 156,357 5,406 ' 33, 171 82,368 42, 891 31, 556 92, 6O5 , 69, 270 4, 435, 614 781, 530 32, 454 1, 768, 178 580,862 349, 049 6,378,479- 5, 039, 545 , 5, 046, 543 ■' 824, 682 6, 385, 734 1,983,313 2, 468, 034 1, 830, 807 637, 065 654,313 57088^758 13,096,374 .; ■ 8,242,183 3,79^792 •405,468 7, 644, 208 3, 707, 108 2, 704, 133 3, OO'S, 267 2, 155, 512 3, 476, 296 556, 250 5, 065, 755 6,246,871 2, 367, 034 1, 944, 441 14, 358, 403 6,517,284 12,625,394 896, 4^4 10,463,296 335, 128 • 4,572,050 6,795,337 2, 650, 781 2, 823, 157 11,437_,821 3, 746, 167 7, 702, 067 1, 816,684 3, 861, 531 615,701 375, 283 1, 246, 340 16,443,900 6, 997, 867 7, 746, 879 1, 911, 382 12,718,821 ^ 7,590,393 \ 6, 262, 000 673, 457 367,230 2,266,015 18,587,732 7, 815, 615 8, l4S,'l09 6, 277, 115 *1, 372, 932 11, 519; 053 6,591,468 3,02,3,538 1, 833, 304 1, 183, 213 3,554,538 3, 155, 718 10,773^929 13,7371939 1, 377, 591 1,039,084 6,616,555 17, 245, 685 7,846,747 1, 164, 125 6,548,844 ■ 186, 096 11, 623, 859 13, 873, 828 22,693,247 1,451,257 19, 679, 215 4,147,420 389. 146 4,466 . 106 158 371 444 158 136 185 346_ /\'' 245' /V 465 Q 99 - 151 f 444 ^ 430 5 146 -V 13} /' 165 .>1 171 1 211 ', 536 C 103 ^ 190 , 113 7i m^ 370, -l 215 J: 133 7 108 7 106 7 316 'J 114, ^ 355 t: 109 / 96 J 488 251^ 691 f- 135 \ 324 .. ^;^ 52 Oi^ 9, J4 55 3 ?-*: 4 5 Delaware.. L ^i 3 2A^ 37 7 ^n 132 R Illinoia .'. ••^^ 108 9 ^' 93 in t'L.^ 'f^^l 19, 74, 777 13,422 46,760 21,860 34, 069 34,689 *157 33, 960 54,458 29,229 2.3, 905 170, 621 56, 963 143, 807 *1, 1^ 127, 577 5,385 29,9^ 72, 735 12, 198 29, 763 77, 013 20, 177 5, 968, 270 1, 590, 025 2, 039, 596 3, 797, 905 2, 133, 436 1,929,110 *5,035 3, 444, 358 . 2,938,425 2, 251,' 488 1, 767, 991 12,408,964 5,453,975 9, 851, 493 *132,^57 8, 623, 619 356,487 4, 072, 551 5,175,173 643, 976 3, 601, 409 JP^O, 135 1,045,499 10, 981, 478 3, 399, 018 ^ 2,515,797 1, 836, 445 1,222,576 2,454,780 *23,846 7, 046, 061 6, 794, 345 1, 140, 926 984,955 6,710,120 15,543,008 8, 146, 000 •299^951, 6,294,728 197,451 12, 145, 049 1.3,808,849 10,852,363 1, 524, 413 15, 792, 176 1, 931, 159 227 372 97 212 99 129 H84' 309 179 116 115 113 369 135 t372^ 117 103 - 541 261 942 139 ' 340 148 ^'\'' 109 13 ta'' 14 15 1« 17 ^- 62 IR SVV-.64 1<> Mississippi '.'-'■"--60 90 I'-^llS "1 - 1^ 10 oo > 21 OT New York -/■ 60' 04 North Carolina 16 ..86 '>% Ohio A 5^^'^88 "fi 1- ' 19 "7 ^h 65 C ' 30 "R nq 3n >Vl^--g4 31 K, 151 a!( /4 14 33 Virginia --'■^ 146 34 /i.' 68 Total, States 1,442,809 2,0.30,785 112, 690, 821 162, 649, 848 180, 038, 130 241,943,671 203 199 2,011 TERRITORIES. Columbia, District of Dakota 1 267 238 123 2,739 91 5,086 3,635 1,330 16,267 17, 474 2,115 118, 789 14, 132 149, 274 77,31S 81, 869 11, 187 16, 789 24, 333 612, 425 41, 986 1, 265, 635 12, 692 284,387 103 144 316 336 617 278 ■ 25 275 1 3 34 4 3 5 3,750 926 166,201 16, 333 134, 370 30,516 77 '51 11 R Utah .. . 20 7 19 Total, Territories Aggregate, States and Ter- - ► " 6,264 13, 292 336, 693 460, 872 489, 870 2, 158, 147 134 197 88 1,449,073 2, 044, 077 1 113, 027, 514 163, 110, 720 180, 528, 000 344,101,818 303 194 3,099 • Added in Territorial totals (1850) respectively, t Territory. ALABAMA. 223 SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. COUNTIES. NUMBER OP SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. s p 'S -« i 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 ,46 47 48 49 50 51 52 Autauga Baldwin Barbour Bibb Blount -■■:■- Butler Cfilhoun Chambers Cherokee Choctaw Clarke Coffee Conecuh CooBa -. Covington Dale . -j». - ];) alias— DeKalb Fayette Franklin Greene Henry Jackson Jefferson Lawrence Lauderdale Limestone Lowndes Madison Marengo Marion Marshall Macon Mobile Montgomery Monroe Morgan Perry Pickens Pike Randolph Russell Shelby St. Clair Sumter Tallapoosa Talladega Tuscaloosa Wallter Washington Wilcox ■>.. Winston Total. 51 154 90 33 126 129 250 115 100 90 64 60 144 41 84 125 48 87 75 101 89 113 39 57 91 167 146 168 92 63 51 84 439 188 101 77 143 217 174 119 162 87 63 65 127 127 146 32 32 112 3 .5,607 56 22 104 58 12 75 71 167 81 64 76 34 43 73 19 45 112 22 49 35 75 60 73 49 83 94 133 65 28 74 291 132 66 54 96 148 115 56 96 65 27 65 93 88 100 20 15 110 3 3,663 66 22 30 81 18 33 43 68 '52 52 33 24 46 48 85 91 53 20 29 58 168 91 41 29 64 86 111 50 96 33 30 51 63 76 76 9 15 90 1 2,805 33 -20 77 25 10 69 37 90 47 41 41 17 24 41 10 28 97 15 23 39 72 36 34 33 22 41 42 66 75 38 17 10 53 149 107 51 32 69 73 77 37 50 26 25 58 64 63 47 9 12 58 2,329 7 50 46 85 29 36 40 13 22 40 11 14 46 15 21 34 46 26 36 13 23 29 32 57 72 54 15 13 51 113 74 51 33 36 61 64 28 64 39 16 44 57 50 60 3 10 61 1 1,986 37 16 68 22 9 42 33 74 33 36 33 16 26 38 7 16 56 10 18 23 47 21 22 19 32 23 24 42 40 41 8 14 55 115 69 ■ 39 31 40 57 61 31 49 16 11 38 43 38 50 8 9 43 1 1,729 26 57 21 36 22 12 15 29 6 17 53 4 15 19 43 28 23 10 18 16 30 43 46 38 9. 12 47 82 47 28 13 54 31 43 16 41 22 4 31 41 39 49 4 5 36 1,411 34 7 13 38 9 18 17 42 IS 17 11 9 17 14 39 38 44 4 8 44 72 52 20 16 48 31 37 14 33 10 10 33 28 36 36 3 8 37 1 17 13 34 17 5 37 23 40 16 18 15 5 10 30 4 10 35 3 11 18 33 15 10 11 13 15 18 33 28 33 6 4 32 49 48 23 15 34 25 31 1,227 1,036 75 29 157 52 12 87 55 149 40 92 90 17 52 64 ; 8 :28 !l63 11 39 61 154 46 33 37 47 67 47 120 134 106 23 18 144 144 151 73 34 108 111 99 29 110 65 23 123 98 74 100 9 17 115 2 3,742 18 50 43 14 38 35 3 18 107 5 9 33 97 36 23 20 26 45 36 73 72 72 9 16 79 67 90 50 22 76 2,164 49 16 86 27 5 53 27 74 16 38 50 7 29 33 3 9 118 4 6 46 105 3d 30 9 29 32 39 100 86 69 5 10 115 54 91 61 20 93 77 67 S ^ 84 32 17 86 45 65 - 64 3 14 82 1 2,323 1,253 768 12 7. 1 58 I I 791 550 20 24 576 289 1,143 447 135 748 567 1,298 498 640 645 239 398 641 144 314 1,280 165 330 519 1,115 489 482 284 391 523 661 1,098 1,117 944 204 224 1,020 1, 785 1,385 676 391 1,045 1,071 999 406 1,P44 428 257 889 776 796 886 102 179 1,044 14 33,730 224 ARKANSAS, SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. COUNTIES. NUMBER OF SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. , 1 •a 1 1 ■a 1 m ■1 1 ao i 1 1 s o i 1 1 ! 1 § 1 1 § s % 1 1 1 1 8 r-( a 6j s s 1 1 IS s i •3 1 1 1 38 60 38 54 26 34 15 77 76 30 36 16 10 50 32 72 32 7 15 73 44 90 20 42 126 39 36 49 27 30 17 18 6 6 118 13 61 17 30 27 53 65 85 23 58 50 14 6 29 76 89 18 73 58 35 33 54 21 44 19 7 13 36 41 19 35 13 7 30 23 41 19 7 11 49 15 30 10 40 69 28 26 24 11 14 7 23 5 2 86 2 65 15 19 10 42 52 54 18 32 33 7 3 19 51 60 11 40 40 18 16 41 7 24 19 11 14 35 41 15 17 6 2 30 15 32 17 4 9 39 12 24 2 24 50 19 19 15 7 5 5 10 7 2 65 4 46 9 11 6 28 35 37 8 24 15 6 1 17 30 45 10 36 30 12 16 33 8 26 6 6 12 36 36 7 12 12 4 13 17 33 9 3 6 30 12 17 1 29 40 13 24 9 8 7 2 15 14 24 13 24 6 4 14 23 26 5 7 13 11 22 5 19 13 6 12 22 24 4 6 5 6 29 3 17 6 2 4 17 18 5 8 8 16 13 2 10 6 2 6 8 21 7 3 6 1 14 5 18 2 7 13 2 9 2 7 3 12 22 1 5 5 26 41 6 35 9 2 20 35 57 8 12 16 10 39 2 12 e 2 18 12 24 2 7 17 1 32 11 33 6 21 29 9 10 8 4 8 3 14 2 4 3 260 417 107 311 133 84 225 335 429 110 153 153 25 316 204 393 129 26 56 447 124 246 65 298 563 170 271 139 83 70 76 178 24 11 587 30 549 63 133 59 209 371 377 85 311 169 50 20 121 357 607 53 301 250 149 4,921 3,761 384 3 4 20 9 1 18 17 26 3 2 12 5 2 6 1 5 1 1 2 690 7 16 2 12 2 2 10 9 1 2 18 2 2 1 15 16 1 .... 1 .... 7,512 2,214 3,599 Clark 1 1 4 1 11 858 13 Crittflndnn 4 6 2,347 87 13 14 16 12 28 7 S 7 31 6 18 3 15 26 15 16 16 9 3 1 11 1 18 7 20 6 10 4 18 6 15 2 15 1 1 16 2 12 2 16 15 5 8 2 3 2 4 9 1 47 19 43 11 2 1 48 13 11 9 39 53 16 31 7 5 5 5 19 19 19 20 8 6 8 12 3 7 8 3 1 5 9 4 3 7 2 1 6 3,494 3,784 3 497 15 16 1 ■■ 962 88 3 29 3 8 7 16 22 11 10 7 4 2 3 10 1 ■2 12 4 6 2 16 23 4 7 5 5 2 2 2 1 14 5 9 4 12 12 8 9 3 3 2 7 1 20 1 16 2 6 5 11 8 4 11 4 4 1 6 11 34 6 10 8 6 1 37 3 8 1 16 34 5 17 2 Hempstead Hot Spring Independence 26 5 7 4 20 24 6 25 14 11 9 5 3 1 5,398 613 1,337 382 21 3S 3 1 2 93 S4 8 18 3 13 2 16 1 8 2,535 7,146 973 4,311 494 296 261 25 14 8 15 9 6 5 28 29 30 1 6 6 fl 6 15 4 23 1 6 2 1 5 4 3 .... 1 1 461 32 2,226 92 Montgomery ? Prairie 1 3 2 9 1 3 2 839 43 Pulaski 1 3,505 359 44 Randolph 45 St. Francis Saline 9 3 2 1 3,621 4fi 47 Scott 48 4 1 1 n 1 i •3 1 1 00 1 S 1 -d § o 1 •a § a s a s it § 1 1 s o 1 S ■§ P ■d § 1 1 c5 § § 1 (3 O t H '3 1 •a ■a 1 4 1 2 3 4 45 1 3 9 38 2 44 52 7 42 24 30 23 22 17 2 1 3 9 13 8 9 8 41 1 5 5 32 19 25 9 8 15 3 5 300 4 27 49 205 2 240 237 60 355 150 4,457 21 2 5 19 1 6 14 1 4 7 2 2 12 2 1 10 2 2 14 1 7 11 1 1 5 2 1 7 4 3 524 2 11 13 1 519 2,063 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Dade 2 30 28 10 25 13 19 22 3 35 19 16 25 6 22 16 17 17 6 18 9 16 11 16 8 15 8 7 17 7 6 11 4 9 9 4 2 1 15 5 31 33 6 40 21 18 8 2 31 12 16 12 5 43 5 4 1 3 15 1 2 2 2 3 1,987 1 .... 1,961 520 7 4 9 3 4 7 5,409 1,397 200 Hfllaborongh 38 6 50 64 12 52 12 4 25 5 36 23 41 28 9 23 34 34 9 14 5 13 17 37 5 15 9 21 37 6 47 4 6 24 5 39 16 22 21 4 9 25 33 8 5 6 3 10 20 11 11 3 33 23 3 39 4 2 18 2 21 12 16 14 2 14 20 13 3 6 1 1 13 14 7 7 5 22 24 1 27 * 4 15 2 18 10 14 13 2 6 14 20 2 7 3 6 6 10 4 9 2 16 23 3 24 2 3 12 1 15 6 16 3 4 2 11 6 6 3 3 2 11 1 2 6 27 21 28 3 1 13 7 2 11 19 3 24 2 2 11 5 6 12 1 56 40 7 76 7 8 37 1 35 7 21 12 1 13 19 12 7 10 1 1 13 5 10 3 38 34 1 36 1 7 20 1 1 29 26 2 26 2 3 30 120 29 357 397 42 515 46 46 264 19 345 91 189 121 31 103 166 157 72 67 23 38 116 107 56 564 112 18 12 23 1 8 1 10 1 5 5 4 4 5 4 4 1 6 7 1 13 16 1 14 2 2 7 1 16 1 7 4 1 6 6 2 2 1 3 5 3 2 13 18 7 11 3 12 4,903 8 1 10 1 9 2 10 6,374 577 18 19 31 1 2 18 17 8 30 1 1 10 9,089 450 521 5 3 1 3 4,249 253 Marion 18 4 11 6 3 5 8 8 4 5 5 5 5 4 13 4 9 2 3 4 7 9 3 4 1 2 4 1 3 38 4 11 8 1 5 5 6 8 1 1 36 3 9 3 1 5 7 3 6 4 17 15 11 4 5 314 23 451 2 1 2 1 1 1 1 1,612 New River 744 2b 163 2/ 2 1 4 9 2 1 1 7 1 2 2 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 o 1,047 Santa Bosa 1,371 29 1,003 Suwanee 835 31 1 549 32 125 33 1 297 34 8 2 3 9 1 1 1 1 1 1,167 35 441 3b Washington Total 2 474 37 863 568 437 365 285 270 225 186 169 627 349 333 171 99 116 42 45 2 5,152 61, 745 'Estimated. 29 226 GEORGIA. SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES, COUNTIES. NUMBER OF SLAVBHOLDEES AND SLAVES. 3 o Appling Baker Baldwin Banlcs Berrien Bibb Brooks Bryan Bullock Burke Butts Calhoun Camden Campbell Carroll Cass Catoosa Chattahoochee . 19 t Charlton . Chattooga . Chatllam . . Cherokee.. Clai-k Clay Clayton ... CliflCh Cobb 28 Colquitt . . . 29 I Columbia.. 30 ! Coffee Lti Coweta Crawford... Dade Dawson Decatur DeKalb Dooly Dougherty . Early Echols Effingham.. Elbert Emanuel . . - Fannin Fayette Floyd Forsyth Franldin Pulton Gilmer Crlasscock .. Glynn Gordon Greene 5^' Gwinnett. Habersham. Hall Hancock Haralson Hart Harris , Heard Henry Houston Irwin ... Jackson Jefferson . Johnson.. Jones Tjaurens . . 14 145 28 37 141 35 19 44 75 63 38 26 49 95 70 23 38 201 45 93 ai 29 17 109 7 42 12 101 51 13 19 76 55 47 40 31 12 40 68 40 17 68 74 61 50 95 6 24 14 58 55 71 29 56 43 22 46 53 63 127 35 13 111, 64 55 12 24 20 15 14 65 22 25 105 23 8 26 74 29 25 9 32 55 63 12 24 5 35 126 30 47 23 20 8 67 6 31 9 74 56 44 48 33 24 20 6 26 54 26 6 46 47 29 28 65 3 14 18 39 35 53 12 38 18 7 28 50 44 61 40 8 76 45 33 13 21 15 12 8 31 19 10 80 22 5 20 53 22 19 13 21 47 H9 18 19 3 27 126 20 36 12 24 6 50 5 41 11 63 30 4 3 32 31 19 10 32 105 24 34 8 11 9 47 2 28 2 48 30 3 7 36 30 22 17 21 6 20 33 13 1 28 30 18 15 48 6 7 8 32 31 33 8 26 24 10 19 40 38 38 41 3 44 33 28 7 17 15 7 11 21 7 3 53 10 9 21 34 21 11 8 15 24 26 12 13 3 17 109 12 28 18 16 4 34 2 27 4 45 19 2 7 21 13 •18 18 10 4 12 28 12 3 15 29 6 13 41 6 6 6 15 31 23 8 23 25 4 17 36 20 44 25 2 39 19 27 2 25 17 1 30 17 26 18 14 5 15 21 9 2 7 23 7 16 36 3 3 3 20 45 17 6 14 24 4 9 29 23 27 26 2 23 36 26 5 18 3 7 16 10 5 29 8 6 15 27 12 6 3 17 18 18 5 14 3 19 55 12 31 15 9 4 20 1 16 5 35 16 3 2 21 16 15 11 7 6 33 8 5 5 24 9 6 3 14 13 13 6 7 3 10 43 13 23 12 6 3 24 1, 23 6 33 IS 1 3 14 18 20 19 33 34 50 9 23 7 35 129 19 81 18 16 6 62 1 70 7 88 34 6 6 53 34 45 29 21 4 27 52 23 1 30 78 15 24 36 3 5 14 40 62 32 9 20 48 2 24 73 40 66 70 2 45 61 55 9 46 33 3 17 25 8 1 36 29 6 17 65 30 19 15 15 5 35 6 25 2 7 60 4 46 11 8 1 16 1 57 4 52 20 1 2 35 13 25 24 18 3 19 31 8 1 16 37 3 3 19 1 3 6 9 65 19 4 4 55 23 10 5 8 40 9 8 10 3 2 13 1 7 2 2 20 1 13 8 6 1 7 22 15 15 15 32 122 183 486 162 109 793 262 111 255 720 317 210 170 278 360 425 119 234 55 276 1,205 207 544 193 170 74 529 27 487 75 691 369 46 62 465 303 347 322 237 49 242 470 174 40 388 529 187 317 478 35 94 140 297 577 368 109 246 430 63 217 575 350 564 560 44 492 496 431 84 328 227 745 3,492 4,929 1,086 433 6,790 3,282 2,379 2,162 12, 052 3,067 2,731 4,143 2,004 1,862 4,282 710 3,758 557 2,054 14, 807 1,199 5,660 2,253 1,220 449 3,819 110 8,393 663 7,248 4,270 300 326 5,924 2,000 4,070 6,079 4,057 314 2,165 5,711 1,294 143 2,019 5,913 890 1,313 2,955 167 758 2,839 2,106 8,398 2,551 787 1,261 8,137 229 1,528 7,736 2,811 4,515 10, 755 246 3,329 6, 9.')4 6,045 849 5,989 3,269 aEORGIA. 227 SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. COUNTIES. NUMBER OF SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. i ■3 r4 i 1 1 DO n 7i 1 i 1 QQ 1 to 1 1 00 i 1 Oi in i 1 O 1 i d § 1 o s o -a 1 s i 1 P 1 o o 8 CO a 1 a 1 O 1 1 o s o s i-T i 'o •s 1 O B Q> ■a 1 72 Lee 75 26 26 55 12 95 63 134 22 76 7 28 23 79 18 44 37 119 102 58 41 6 12 97 40 46 50 37 16 62 178 27 63 70 73 57 66 45 40 39 21 94 48 3 72 46 12 85 52 103 53 6 70 13 52 ' 16 69 16 62 78 22 28 26 10 28 9 38 43 47 17 53 8 13 20 67 15 47 21 93 68 32 23 3 7 53 17 40 30 16 9 41 106 22 30 53 61 36 60 30 24 22 11 42 35 8 57 30 4 58 24 67 51 9 60 9 28 3 52 4 39 34 12 21 13 17 15 7 29 27 27 11 53 6 14 14 53 7 41 13 67 70 43 18 5 9 66 17 25 22 18 6 35 79 21 24 56 54 30 56 20 23 17 11 26 27 1 60 15 3 44 28 55 26 8 43 7 13 30 9 40 29 6 20 19 12 14 3 35 22 21 9 44 4 9 12 64 10 24 10 54 47 44 9 6 10 37 16 26 14 17 4 24 64 17 34 34 43 28 47 16 7 22 4 23 29 2 46 14 6 33 17 50 32 4 46 6 20 5 20 5 36 19 4 16 16 18 11 7 31 11 25 47 4 6 6 40 13 18 8 48 47 26 10 3 37 13 20 16 6 4 40 51 15 29 45 40 23 38 18 11 15 9 25 23 1 54 19 1 31 15 42 31 8 31 2 17 3 16 7 39 25 7 10 6 13 12 2 14 13 16 8 41 5 5 3 40 6 18 7 43 39 26 7 4 4 28 10 22 13 7 20 47 15 13 40 36 21 23 17 8 14 8 10 19 2 33 8 4 23 13 42 33 4 41 2 18 4 22 3 35 33 7 16 7 16 10 2 9 8 13 8 27 2 5 5 35 5 34 10 37 39 22 4 3 33 11 15 6 5 2 39 43 7 37 36 24 17 19 12 10 8 7 11 13 1 45 9 34 16 32 13 3 39 1 16 2 39 17 18 4 9 9 11 10 3 27 14 15 4 33 4 1 4 38 9 13 4 38 40 16 8 1 1 29 9 12 16 5 2 19 32 5 17 28 21 15 34 8 10 14 4 21 20 1 32 13 1 18 7 21 16 2 13 7 4 4 12 1 11 18 4 6 10 2 9 1 17 8 13 7 23 2 3 5 28 3 15 7 25 20 26 3 3 5 34 13 9 11 7 1 22 31 7 15 15 18 13 18 12 8 7 2 6 17 . 2 29 7 1 14 12 22 13 1 19 1 6 1 18 1 16 15 1 27 34 31 38 3 43 34 46 16 98 12 8 21 109 17 37 12 101 93 60 10 4 3 62 28 44 48 15 2 48 107 16 39 53 64 52 98 33 15 23 7 30 50 1 110 35 52 39 59 5T 6 63 5 35 6 38 3 52 61 3 23 15 28 19 5 36 9 26 10 64 3 2 8 60 5 36 10 47 37 47 1 1 1 39 16 22 48 14 3 33 59 11 36 36 48 28 49 32 9 13 6 21 37 1 77 33 1 39 9 41 40 3 45 30 1 13 1 43 17 3 36 39 28 12 4 25 11 28 8 62 4 5 9 88 7 35 6 44 34 60 3 1 16 17 14 12 5 11 12 3 12 18 5 3 5 8 3 6 5 2 1 1 1 322 281 248 251 58 442 275 432 156 689 Co 102 141 790 119 424 151 763 679 526 136 37 55 553 226 345 402 167 49 434 901 188 378 488 608 393 648 271 177 228 98 350 405 23 769 297 33 496 234 584 452 57 560 63 257 47 318 57 518 387 81 4,947 73 Liberty 6,083 74 75 76 77 Lincoln 3,768 2,399 1 4 432 20 7 13 8 39 1 3 8 43 3 23 2 17 21 30 5 1 3 6 17 2 14 4 3 4 12 1 4,865 1,992 79 80 1 10 9 1 6 1 3,529 1 .... 1 4,063 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 Meriwether Miller 8,748 640 617 Mifphnll 1 22 13 2 12 5 13 1 18 1 22 1 7 10 12 1 5 1 8 1,589 1 10, 177 Montgomery 977 5 1 7,006 1 1,442 8 6 10 2 1 1 7,445 6,458 Oglethorpe 7, 514 572 1 246 233 30 18 30 57 10 15 8 15 26 4 9 5 8 15 2 4 2 7 16 1 4,722 3 3 9 3 2,440 2 5 1 4,106 7,138 1,625 206 35 51 9 31 39 61 34 74 15 10 16 6 19 33 10 24 7 8 9 31 16 25 10 1 9 1 10 26 8 11 6 7 2 14 7 17 6 1 2 1 6 9 5 9 1 8 2 9 8 14 5 3 6 2 3 4,467 3 8,389 S(>ii1pv 2,348 3 1 4,530 3,819 5 8 6 2 5 1 4 1 7,884 4,890 8,603 2,849 1,157 5 2 1 2,397 !^. 836 6 16 2,888 10 3 6,244 108 73 28 39 13 13 12 31 9 4 10 4 5 10, 002 1 5,318 116 37 7 30 53 3 44 5 13 2 13 2 59 22 4 35 3 10 18 19 1 7 6 2 4 7 1 10 2 4 4 3 4,888 1,535 5 8 1 1 4,621 ^^ ™ 5,379 *)^^"^^ 377 Washington 6 1 3 9 1 2 6,532 621 125 126 127 128 129 130 13; 2,287 263 2 2 25 10 1 1 2 15 10 2 3 1 SO 5 3 1,732 421 10 2 3 1 ] 7,953 3,887 632 Total - . 6,713 4,355 3,482 2,984 2,543 2,213 1,839 1,647 1,415 4,707 3,823 2,910 1,400 739 739 373 181 23 7 1 .... 41, 084 462, 198 Note.— KANSAS— Anderson county— 2 elaveholderB, (1 each)— 2 slaves. 228 KENTUCKY. ILAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. COUNTIES. NUMBER OP SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. i 1 1 n 1 ■^ 1 I ■3 1 1 i 1 1 S 1 1 2 1 •a 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 CO 1 3 1 1 1 1 rt 1 j ^ Adair 98 76 62 89 152 80 137 133 17 102 50 16 89 54 73 75 77 23 66 12 20 132 147 26 30 61 61 136 16 21 177 194 16 109 73 58 153 67 128 31 69 30 34 130 3 138 99 112 159 85 122 1 700 83 2 97 28 52 9 8 12 27 77 46 33 39 48 94 58 78 72 13 68 25 6 74 43 24 61 56 10 42 4 15 112 111 12 12 37 41 111 12 21 121 83 5 74 44 21 73 37 75 16 43 12 23 67 4 84 59 111 104 52 72 2 354 58 2 43 17 ■tl 3 11 2 13 70 32 29 28 30 78 52 51 78 7 46 20 3 48 37 18 41 39 9 30 9 15 87 74 4 10 22 31 82 10 11 103 50 5 70 31 14 49 12 74 13 40 9 15 52 1 60 37 85 83 19 50 248 47 3 28 12 22 4 5 4 7 44 38 23 31 29 52 34 50 73 2 28 28 5 43 32 21 35 27 3 16 5 8 65 53 2 7 25 10 64 8 12 113 30 2 48 20 10 52 18 70 9 27 9 18 51 3 38 29 58 72 26 37 1 208 30 3 11 11 15 5 1 1 7 48 23 22 17 19 56 38 28 69 2 37 10 4 26 15 8 17 26 1 13 5 4 64 50 5 3 14 16 39 1 7 73 24 4 47 16 10 37 7 41 6 24 8 13 39 3 54 16 44 54 21 29 16 21 20 17 52 30 29 52 3 37 6 3 23 26 10 28 16 1 16 7 10 48 39 6 3 12 17 34 2 5 81 24 2 40 9 14 34 11 38 4 18 4 12 35 14 10 13 14 34 28 21 49 1 30 9 1 23 9 16 21 20 1 16 2 6 48 57 4 4 8 9 27 4 6 64 27 1 29 12 5 31 11 27 2 13 6 6 35 12 12 11 13 28 15 15 49 18 8 4 15 16 7 21 10 13 9 8 10 21 11 13 40 1 27 5 18 5 4 11 10 22 18 22 30 67 48 19 128 2 58 10 4 37 24 10 29 28 1 22 6 12 124 94 5 3 11 24 57 5 10 175 38 1 56 12 9 65 8 45 1 39 3 12 37 2 51 21 85 59 17 30 11 8 13 9 25 17 8 68 1 28 3 3 6 2 8 19 13 1 33 2 3 1 3 8 1 1 1 1 331 272 267 320 689 425 450 858 49 503 176 46 424 277 196 374 320 49 238 56 109 979 757 71 77 211 251 637 63 107 1,20Q 513 39 556 343 162 591 187 566 93 339 88 148 507 19 586 323 713 676 283 433 4 2,258 493 11 214 106 305 35 38 29 71 496 1,602 1,522 1,357 1,718 4,078 3,500 1,745 6,767 156 3,279 750 190 2,340 1,458 770 2,406 1,492 o Allen 1 t Anderson 1 4 Ballard 1 3 5 Barren fi Bath Boone....... 1 7 1 R 10 1 2 1 q Boyd in 20 2 3 1 1 11 IS Breathitt 13 Breckinridge Bullitt 15 9 5 14 5 10 6 2 1 1 14 11 Butler Caldwell Ifi 16 6 2 3 17 Calloway Campbell CarroU Carter.-- 1R 19 9 3 6 36 30 2 6 9 28 6 57 20 18 9 8 24 5 20 4 13 3 4 22 1 1 5 28 27 3 2 6 9 19 3 7 54 10 1 16 2 7 18 7 20 6 15 1 3 17 2 28 9 19 15 8 8 5 1 6 90 51 1 1 3 13 15 1 84 9 3 27 7 3 30 2 17 1 15 3 13 2 1,045 309 ?n 1 21 Casey Christian Clark Clay Clinton Crittenden 1 84 20 1 1 5 S2 33 2 2 14 1 9 1 9,951 4,762 va 94 95 258 939 Pfi 4 10 16 2 2 1 3 3,7 Cumberland Daviess 1,413 3,515 Wl 3 2 1 S9 Bdmondson Estill Payette Fleming 30 31 74 3 12 1 6 6, J 10,015 3,018 32 33 Floyd Franklin 34 15 5 3 21 2 9 13 3 5 6 5 1 1 1 1 3,384 1,078 708 3,578 696 35 Pulton.- 3fi Gallatin 37 3 2 3R Grant 39 Graves 2 1 5 2,845 351 40 Grayson 41 3 2 2,372 42 Greenup 43 Hancock 44 Hardin . . 1 1 1 2 2,530 127 45 Harlan 4fi Harrison 38 14 43 33 16 22 28 14 26 42 14 30 23 8 28 21 15 13 26 10 38 27 7 11 11 6 35 5 3 7 6 3,289 1,395 5,767 3,311 1 249 47 Hart 48 Henderson. 16 3 4 4 2 49 Henry 50 Hickman 51 Hopkins 2 2,009 7 10,394 52 Jackson ... .... 53 Jefferson.. 158 .37 11 7 21 1 2 3 3 26 122 34 1 - 4 3 10 5 5 4 37 80 26 74 25 67 21 140 70 45 27 50 17 8 13 2 3 3 1 .... .... .... 54 Jessamine 55 Johnson 27 567 56 Kenton 8 3 8 2 2 1 5 30 4 10 6 1 1 5 7 6 5 18 3 4 3 2 70 4 5 1 1 1 57 Knox 489 58 LaBue ■■ 900 59 Laurel 1 186 fiO Lawrence 146 108 230 3.430 61 Letcher 23 3 2 18 1 1 36 .... .... .... fi2 Lewis .... .... 63 Lincoln 20 7 KENTUCKY. 229 SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. COUNTIES. NUMBER OP SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. •a ■a (» 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 Livingston.... Logan Lyon McCrocken . . . McLean Madison Magoffin Marion Marehall Mason Meade Mercer MetcaUa Monroe Montgomery.. Morgan '. . Mublenburg . Nelson Nicholas Ohio Oldham Owen Owsley Pendleton... Perry Pike Powell Pulaski Rock Castle . Rowan Rnssell Scott Shelby Simpson Spencer Taylor Todd Trigg Trimble Union Warren Washington . Wayne Webster Whitley Woodford . . . Total. 75 267 50 99 103 169 3 140 57 194 100 135 40 57 89 19 80 274 91 73 65 107 10 46 15 9 10 77 28 13 33 385 303 115 82 81 79 107 55 89 181 78 50 62 18 81 38 136 24 67 43 100 2 80 60 86 27 29 63 9 63 123 56 49 43 65 3 25 2 3 4 41 19 6 19 110 123 61 52 26 77 75 50 30 39 15 60 5,430 24 110 20 37 27 91 1 67 13 62 30 56 18 23 41 6 30 101 48 40 35 34 3 8 5 8 5 38 11 3 12 75 86 35 33 35 45 50 19 55 71 44 25 4,009 54 6 71 31 54 18 33 34 3 39 73 35 27 35 37 4 8 3 3 1 23 6 1 18 67 86 36 31 17 30 41 17 51 75 39 16 39 4 28 20 82 9 31 21 63 3 45 8 55 30 47 18 12 24 6 35 61 29 23 12 53 76 39 53 11 30 33 12 32 53 24 22 24 5 44 2,694 11 48 11 23 17 56 3 40 4 37 25 29 13 10 31 2 20 56 19 17 27 27 2 4 39 50 29 14 10 3 36 2,293 13 110 16 1 2 7 3 3 6 35 61 13 15 10 37 20 11 18 43 33 4 16 1 )2 1,582 22 4 34 5 30 5 6 25 1 14 24 13 4 12 7 1 62 6 79 39 55 10 13 50 1 38 100 21 32 60 22 2 31 1,273 3 18 9 2 8 93 139 41 40 15 45 95 50 16 11 1 102 3,691 37 32 1,580 42 1,093 15 396 51 251 1,056 178 368 363 877 13 605 133 727 371 574 171 191 455 51 327 977 365 290 3G4 376 27 121 92 32 128 943 1,039 427 398 273 535 478 182 485 793 420 205 244 54 637 38, 645 1,222 6,356 1,094 1,738 888 6,034 71 3,479 351 3,772 1,932 3,274 781 922 2,752 170 1,584 5,530 1,614 1,292 2,431 1,660 112 434 73 97 135 1,330 357 142 559 5,744 6,634 3,307 3,205 1,597 4,849 3,448 831 3,105 5,318 2,823 987 1,083 183 5,829 230 LOUISIANA. SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. PARISHES. NUMBER OF SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. 1 1 ■a i 1 1 ■ s 1 in i CO 1 1 00 OS . § s 8 1 4 it 1 1 a 1 1 1 s 1 rrt 1 1 irt -a s o s 1 s i-T i ! 1 T 51 93 85 105 31 26 46 55 83 18 28 43 41 52 15 16 32 45 50 9 22 32 36 41 12 18 26 32 33 11 19 20 19 22 5 6 20 22 24 9 8 18 14 15 4 25 31 68 62 23 9 24 41 55 14 10 26 39 44 9 4 11 24 23 5 5 11 12 12 5 4 14 5 8 9 8 15 6 13 13 10 14 9 8 14 3 1 1 1 1 3 1 2 .... 277 478 5.54 651 207 2 ABBumption AvoyelleB 8,096 7,185 8, 5^0 5,340 5,000 8,000 7,338 1,171 1,945 13, 908 6,113 7,848 12,542 8,507 10, 593 9,571 3,402 10,680 4,098 5,120 4,463 6,395 1,311 12, 477 6,569 9,434 14,484 2,840 5,385 12, 903 3 4 Baton Rouge, East. Baton Rouge, West . Bienville* 5 fi 7 Bossier 36 51 39 43 87 25 122 19 76 50 29 37 49 57 53 102 101 27 18 52 78 1,435 20 54 88 90 47 20 18 51 66 53 179 99 36 24 15 43 78 40 50 70 34 42 IB 22 47 31 81 12 48 37 22 28 37 44 49 53 64 21 18 55 67 821 16 26 42 61 20 16 10 35 40 49 85 57 38 22 15 32 55 24 22 29 39 39 21 17 42 26 59 11 41 38 16 22 37 39 32 44 42 11 19 40 54 609 9 18 38 38 18 10 10 20 51 36 82 53 23 16 14 29 39 13 20 20 27 33 12 13 31 26 50 9 36 31 16 22 33 33 25 28 46 12 8 24 48 369 13 10 34 23 17 7 8 23 38 31 58 51 27 14 7 17 31 10 19 14 23 22 13 5 43 22 54 6 24 40 19 26 22 27 18 32 43 19 10 20 32 253 9 9 39 20 15 6 7 23 43 29 52 27 22 11 15 8 22 16 6 15 24 25 15 11 24 15 38 6 29 33 12 17 26 24 20 31 21 9 13 18 32 203 12 7 32 11 13 6 8 16 28 18 58 25 17 7 5 9 23 15 16 11 10 17 7 7 16 15 36 8 26 22 15 13 So 15 12 30 20 13 8 16 20 128 6 11 24 25 16 4 6 16 23 12 47 24 11 8 10 11 12 13 11 9 16 15 9 7 19 17 38 5 19 27 10 16 9 14 12 23 18 10 11 20 17 86 10 10 26 25 4 4 8 12 18 13 42 23 12 6 3 9 16 11 12 8 11 22 6 10 15 11 31 4 11 10 6 15 20 22 7 18 7 6 4 19 27 57 6 5 25 16 3 4 3 9 10 12 34 24 9 7 3 2 22 5 8 4 41 70 20 23 57 30 121 23 85 68 27 51 40 59 26 Si 34 19 32 52 64 134 16 26 64 35 23 9 10 53 39 34 120 87 53 23 15 13 52 19 26 12 37 44 9 6 35 21 54 18 45 49 24 23 32 26 8 29 7 7 18 39 39 40 12 9 49 30 14 5 9 25 27 15 55 40 29 9 19 6 28 3 12 8 50 41 5 8 60 19 60 10 54 55 25 14 23 24 12 22 13 6 32 53 67 16 22 6 ^3 24 14 6 7 27 23 13 51 44 39 8 47 11 32 9 6 2 23 30 1 5 29 16 28 14 33 42 11 14 13 8 5 14 13 1 26 20 26 6 10 3 33 28 3 6 3 12 10 11 37 14 14 3 28 9 14 5 4 3 13 7 1 3 10 17 13 11 13 26 8 4 6 4 3 5 7 3 23 16 13 3 8 6 26 9 1 3 8 10 5 20 16 13 1 23 5 3 2 21 14 1 5 35 10 7 21 25 28 16 2 20 5 12 5 12 29 13 17 3 8 7 23 25 3 4 4 6 11 11 24 7 23 7 39 13 2 1 1 14 14 8 4 427 490 177 188 598 327 794 250 575 577 298 309 442 405 309 492 471 166 329 466 621 4,16^ iSi 231 634 524 211 120 138 337 469 355 963 605 432 169 330 248 430 184 216 209 fi Caddo 9 Calcasieu 10 Caldwell 1 17 20 2 26 4 11 16 4 28 2 2 3 9 2 28 7 10 4 4 6 19 21 2 27 6 n Carroll 1 3 19 Catalioula 13 Claiborne 14 Concordia 41 4 10 21 1 25 2 9 2 12 6 2 IS De Soto 16 Feliciana, East Feliciana, West Franklin 17 IS S 2 1- .... 19 Ibervaie 1 1 20 Jackson .... .... 91 Jefferson 3 1 .... .... 22 Lafayette 23 Lafourche 2 24 Livingston Madison 25 27 2 9 2 5 26 Morehouse Natchitoches Orleans 27 1 28 29 Ouichita .... .... 30 Plaquemines Point Coupee 14 16 30 3 3 8 1 31 3" 4 1 .... 33 Sabine 15, 358 1,713 2,240 4,183 3,711 8,090 4,594 11,436 7,353 34 St. Bernard St. Charles St. Helena St. James 5 11 10 8 15 8 31 2 35 11 1 5 15 I 19 5 3 5 26 1 33 16 35 1 36 37 3 38 St. John the Baptist. St. Landry St. Martin's 39 1 1 7 40 41 3 St. Tammany Tensas 13, 057 1,841 42 43 4 2 Terre Bonne Union 14,592 6 785 44 2 45 3,745 1,316 1 690 46 VermilUon 47 Washington Winn 3 1 1 48 1,354 Total .... 4,092 2,573 8,034 1,536 1,310 1,103 858 771 609, 2,065 1,157 1,241 695 413 560 469 460 63 20 i .... 22,033 331,726 * Estimated. MA^YLA^JD. 231 SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. NUJIBER OF SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. COUNTIES. w Alleghany., Anne Arundel Baltimore City — Baltimore connty* Calvert.- Caroline Carroll.. Cecil Charles Dorchester Frederick Harford Howard Kent Montgomery Prince George's. . . Queen Anne Saint Mary's Somerset . Talbot Washington Worcester Total.. 76 139 866 255 142 63 75 58 77 193 257 203 165 208 173 145 104 149 121 119 143 388 34 94 218 129 46 25 35 27 58 138 144 109 56 119^ 107 70 73 70 99 77 67 157 15 61 108 91 39 27 21 21 49 79 93 93 34 57 55 54 64 64 77 43 47 87 18 63 48 55 35 12 18 20 59 54 62 75 24 46 44 46 41 61 86 48 31 77 1,023 12 55 22 53 33 13 17 10 48 43 58 51 28 31 52 32 54 50 49 29 29 46 815 14 31 44 32 37 42 62 30 20 33 5 27 9 23 19 9 8 6 54 34 25 25 22 28 44 31 23 35 33 22 13 28 17 27 9 9 4 35 25 20 22 22 13 32 28 27 30 45 15 12 27 446 4 32 4 18 13 4 6 3 29 23 18 7 25 21 35 30 12 24 23 18 14 12 380 8 111 3 54 54 10 7 12 127 69 60 29 54 27 88 97 72 109 75 49 16 42 85 20 10 10 14 18 47 73 24 50 37 22 4 17 2 76 23 5 4 11 10 32 90 25 40 28 23 487 21 179 81 13 187 801 1,296 756 528 190 208 172 817 754 794 657 47ff 611 770 847 573 76i 747 506 * Exclusive of city. 232 MISSISSIPPI. SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. COUNTIES. NUMBER OP SLAVEHOLDEKS AND SLAVES. ■a 1 o Adams Amite Attala Bolivar Calhoun Carroll Chickasaw . . . Choctaw Claiborne Clark Coahoma Copiah Covington — DeSoto Franklin Green Hancock* Harrison Hinds Holmes Issaquena Itawamba Jackson Jasper Jefferson Jones Kemper Lafayette . . . . Lauderdale... Lawrence Leake Lowndes Madison Marlon Marshall Monroe Neshoba Newton Noxubee Oktibbeha Panola Perry Pike Pontotoc Bankin Scott Simpson Smith Sunflower* . . . Tallahatchie.. Tippah Tishomingo... Tunica Warren Washington* . Wayne Wilkinson Winston Yalabusha ... Yazoo 64 138 14 98 119 83 146 36 78 34 106 54 126 58 69 64 97 8 72 103 61 69 32 40 14 87 24 88 33 10 95 72 34 29 104 89 57 31 50 27 84 19 136 45 15 29 51 40 21 6 65 59 38 33 38 16 56 21 104 19 42 182 78 3 119 27 46 89 111 126 77 90 145 139 31 176 116 99 91 69 77 76 18 117 149 97 64 46 20 120 83 65 21 61 24 21 59 93 67 51 63 97 75 23 124' 89 54 43 52 39 54 11 73 94 67 46 43 41 14 163 103 10 48 11 56 40 4 62 75 70 58 39 112 165 80 36 50 83 60 80 6 79 87 90 34 24 38 11 102 57 7 25 6 23 30 1 33 42 31 33 21 71 73 12 102 39 18 19 70 48 47 9 31 55 51 23 19 18 4 152 78 13 26 8 29 49 2 34 43 34 21 14 75 99 10 133 59 10 16 60 55 70 6 23 54 50 25 16 12 56 201 146 16 142 34 110 100 11 90 10 Total. 50 80 110 70 33 43 637 297 371 963 702 616 42^ 430 230 737 204 1,089 354 93 161 1,421 806 115 518" 146 503 435 116 552 714 577 450 470 1,006 965 210 1,295 810 374 413 748 549 629 95 587 851 684 368 274 331 360 836 707 132 821 93 499 460 731 099 14,393 7,900 5,015 9,078 1,823 13, 808 9,087 4,197 13,296 5,076 5,085 7,965 1,563 13, 987 4,752 705 857 1,015 22,363 11, 975 7,244 3,528 1,087 4,549 12, 396 407 5,741 7,129 5,088 3,696 3,056 16, 730 18, 118 2,185 17,439 12,729 3,212 3,379 15, 496 7,631 8,557 738 4,935 7,596 7,103 2,959 2,324 2,195 3,917 5, 0.54 6,331 4,981 3,483 13, 763 14, 467 1,947 13, 132 4,323 9,531 16, 716 4,856 3,201 2,503 2,129 1,809 1,585 1,149 1,034 3,432 3,057 2,333 1,143 735 814 545 379 30,913 436. C31 * No returns. MISSOURI. 233 SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. COUNTIES. NUMBER OP SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. 1 1 1 1 CS '3 1 to 1 1 CO. 1 OS s 1 1 s 1 1 g 1 1 o u % g 1 1 o ^1* g 1 ri § s 1 1 g 1 % 1 u % •a 1 8 CI i 1 % > o i-T 1 1 1 16 86 17 106 15 6 46 26 17 312 130 8 88 197 27 74 78 113 2 33 90 21 45 141 81 40 195 15 36 14 39 17 9 4 34 6 66 6 2 16 19 7 116 85 4 10 128 10 43 48 47 3 9 62 14 17 97 37 241 111 13 19 12 22 14 14 5 29 49 9 1 11 16 6 89 54 1 9 92 9 38 30 35 8 8 38 7 13 67 « 21 87 6 22 1 7 8 7 8 17 2 81 8 2 8 20 4 97 49 4 9 66 5 32 23 33 2 18 2 10 18 2 21 5 3 9 1 7 33 24P 29 327 54 11 112 13i 55 885 i^_ 15 72 855 66 302 262 307 8 72 410 66 122 652 283 169 732 52 107 40 116 52 45 86 o 5 15 2 880 ■^ 59 4 16 1 15 2 8 2 10 4 3 1 1 I 1 1,166 247 «i Barry 6 21 7 Bates 6 5 4 56 35 2 3 56 2 16 19 20 6 5 3 49 36 1 4 60 6 18 19 21 1 3 21 6 44 21 15 42 1 3 3 10 1 5 5 1 41 17 1 4 53 12 10 8 3 5 5 38 15 1 ^ 1 40 6 6 19 7 88 24 2 1 1 1 1 442 B 599 q 245 10 32 6 17 8 6 3 4 5,034 1] 2,011 l" 52 11 1 36 3 18 13 10 2 22 2 9 3 8 2 105 2 31 18 10 222 14 22 13 5 4,523 I") 206 16 It Cape Girardeau 6 6 1 2 1 1 1 2 1,533 1,068 la Cass 1,010 Carter 20 6 34 5 80 63 28 11 56 5 9 4 17 5 5 6 25 3 7 59 25 15 50 5 5 4 6 5 4 2 28 4 4 42 11 11 38 2 2 2 15 1 4 30 7 3 22 2 2 12 1 1 18 8 5 26 3 1 3 1 1 3 42 4 8 55 10 11 57 2 6 1 4 211 21 S8 83 24 35 26 87 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 82 16 3 1 1 2,839 229 1 19 6 4 30 1 2 11 2 4 9 455 Clay 3 2 1 3,4.55 1,144 3 6 1 1 1 1 987 1 3,800 182 .346 114 3 2 5 1 1 358 137 1 1 156 13 63 13 18 86 35 7 95 16 23 150 7 22 267 42 52 150 40 22 123 25 115 143 51 45 71 35 13 11 46 8 8 59 22 2 57 14 21 100 3 12 146 21 14 78 21 9 25 15 59 97 25 22 38 15 4 2 35 1 6 37 9 3 32 U 9 57 1 7 ^02 ^15 IS 46 7 9 138 3 41 68 7 19 20 11 3 4 28 1 3 32 12 1 25 4 11 57 1 5 89 7 18 40 9 8 76 12 38 50 14 11 24 7 1 2 23 1 4 24 8 3 16 1 8 19 3 1 19 1 2 13 2 2 12 2 5 4 24 2 44 293 28 44 338 97 13 298 60 88. 801 15 67 89| 107 137 465 94 67 909 76 350 573 143 139 200 107 26 817 171 13 7 1 1 1,601 Gasconade 76 38 39 1 15 2 118 7 2 31 2 6 6 1 2 1,668 Grundy 285 40 41 42 25 16 6 7 54 2 3 57 6 10 31 3 4 87 7 24 41 8 12 14 5 3 14 3 6 50 1 4 60 5 9 29 3 2 62 4 15 41 5 5 7 7 1 vr 12 3 6 35 7 1 47 11 2 34 15 2 2 116 9 4 1 1,245 195 44 1 56 309 29 9 4 2 1 5,886 36 4b ■ 2 38 2 4 23 6 1 64 2 14 24 12 7 9 6 3 30 3 12 1 55 2 17 23 6 7 1 6 20 3 3 9 2 2 37 8 14 3 3 4 2 1 IQ 7 61 6 4 35 2 5 39 4 12 48 8 6 11 10 1 18 1 313 41 5 3 1 3,944 335 49 3 9 2 100 1 6 12 2 1 1 2 2 1 2 54 1 1 7 2 1 1 , 564 bO 1,896 51 284 52 305 53 33 8 5 2 6,374 54 284 55 1,279 56 2 2 1 2,840 57 577 5« 1 liivingBton 605 59 660 60 1 467 61 64 62 Maries Marion trt 10 jfl TO R 1 ^ m7 m 30 234 MISSOURI. SLAVEHOLDEES AND SLAVES. COUNTIES. NUMBER OF SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. i •3 rH 1 OD i ■a n i 1 1 1 «3 •a OQ 1 00 i ■3 3 U S 13 1 1 1 1 s 1 s 1 a § i (4 1 1 s P 1 o 8 ■a 1 o 1 3 o 1 ■s 1 64 9 7 27 44 65 330 100 34 47 63 16 5 20 6 34 59 102 5 242 156 47 7 6 91 109 130 5 15 82 41 60 30 434 110 8 24 25 6 1 10 20 28 104 60 20 34 19 5 2 10 1 2 10 16 26 82 54 14 18 14 3 5 18 1 5 15 13 73 33 13 35 11 3 3 1 4 22 29 2 1 7 17 13 57 24 15 17 5 1 1 7 2 4 14 25 3 1 1 1 23 12 71 160 187 733 373 138 236 141 35 13 71 11 74 187 393 24 871 67^ 146 20 12 378 504 475 14 30 379 133 195 119 1,156 693 16 51 91 3 234 83 8 28 24 21 54 229 188 71 73 29 fi"i 1 fifi Miller . 1 3 7 39 27 13 13 8 1 4 2 4 33 16 10 12 6 1 2 5 5 35 16 6 5 2 1 9 6 16 14 3 4 2 1 4 14 16 49 19 5 17 8 3 (i7 ■6 3 13 5 1 17 3 1 5 2 2 3 2 7 3 1 1,010 745 3.021 1 647 68 69 1 2 6 70 Montgomery 1 1 71 649 72 New Madrid 2 1 1,777 426 73 71 127 75 26 76 2 4 2 3 2 1 3 2 10 256 77 Ozark 1 1 1 8 43 7R 9 37 62 10 130 98 31 3 58 76 78 4 5 46 19 33 21 187 101 3 11 12 1 44 19 2 1 8 4 9 40 28 14 14 5 7 15 54 3 96 85 19 2 2 46 52 66 2 3 49 16 19 12 139 64 1 6 6 1 23 12 3 8 23 2 60 36 5 1 4 12 16 1 39 42 5 3 2 15 2 24 32 3 1 1 15 15 22 1 4 16 31 14 1 1 7 11 14 1 1 12 5 5 3 16 30 1 11 29 3 75 53 4 1 70 739 Rn Pettis 3 1 1.882 84 fil Phelps . R" Pike 81 59 15 1 2 44 59 53 4 39 14 18 16 106 68 2 3 7 57 67 12 4 34 33 1 7 9 3 4 1 4,055 3 313 R1 Platto R4 Polk 512 R"; 56 R6 31 R7 Ralls 35 37 32 3 35 8 13 7 73 50 1 7 33 38 SO 17 37 14 39 54 30 9 22 12 4 4 4 1 1,791 2,019 2,047 38 PR Rl 1 . tn PI Ripley . . 1 33 5 11 10 52 48 1 3 9 1 37 9 14 7 48 71 78 qo St. Charles St. Clair 18 9 12 6 39 45 S 1 10 2 1 32 3 5 1 33 30 1 1 2 14 3 3 2 18 31 9 2 3 3 6 34 2 1 2,181 qri M St. Francois Ste. Genevieve St. Louis 1 1 3 5 Ofi 1 06 3 2 1 3 4,346 4,876 07 Sn,liTif> OR 00 6 3 7 inn Scott 1 2 2 503 13 ini Shannon in" Shelby 101 38 5 13 5 12 28 76 38 22 28 14 20 1 9 5 4 1 3 2 7 13 2 724 215 ^m 1 in4 Stone ins 7 3 1 6 21 23 8 13 4 2 3 1 3 19 30 7 7 3 1 2 1 2 1 2 2 17 18 3 1 1 in6 Taney 1 1 3 7 6 4 3 1 5 6 1 1 82 56 136 in7 Texas inR Vernon 3 10 14 3 1 13 10 3 3 1 1 9 13 5 3 1 ino Warren 6 9 1 6 3 1,034 1,028 261 220 110 Washin^on J 1 111 M9. Webster 1 113 Wright Total 6,893 3,754 2,773 3,243 1,686 1,384 1,130 877 640 1,734 666 349 120 33 26 8 4 24,320 114,9.11 *NoelaveB. NORTH CAROLINA. 235 SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. COUNTIES. Alamance Alexander Alleghany Anson Ashe Beaufort Bertie Bladen Brunswick - . Buncombe.. - Burke Gabarras Caldwell Camden Carteret Caswell Catawba Chatham Cherokee Chowan Cleveland . . . Columbus . . - Craven...... Cumberland . Currituck — Davidson Davie Duplin Edgecombe. . Forsyth Franklin Gaston Gates Granville Greene Guilford Halifax Harnett Haywood ... Henderson . . Hertford Hyde Iredell Jackson Johnson Jones Lenoir Lincoln NUMBER OF SLAVEHOLDEKS AND SLAVES. 112 41 80 58 73 46 74 S9 98 45 29 43 79 71 136 22 60 104 42 123 244 62 115 54 116 66 85 110 82 44 122 93 37 19 42 63 25 140 12 97 64 26 12 59 10 49 48 24 29 42 16 54 29 26 42 67 46 87 13 35 58 32 82 96 50 69 45 78 66 49 63 46 41 108 25 12 33 62 14 56 8 64 23 56 37 I 55 12 7 37 11 45 27 25 21 27 25 40 19 43 36 59 13 21 37 28 76 67 35 59 33 51 47 34 47 28 33 86 36 47 50 23 7 30 33 29 58 5 48 17 41 34 40 15 3 42 5 53 35 17 16 32 14 33 8 33 16 55 25 69 9 12 38 20 33 48 30 42 17 41 40 20 36 27 23 73 38 45 44 8 4 25 36 4 30 16 47 24 49 6 3 43 5 42 23 30 21 20 14 33 15 31 7 43 19 53 8 12 18 16 43 17 41 38 15 39 27 26 85 22 34 38 26 4 13 28 19 50 1 25 23 31 33 7 3 31 3 36 16 13 15 7 14 25 18 25 11 32 17 42 8 12 13 16 27 57 13 30 18 33 47 16 34 18 28 49 24 32 38 9 2 6 23 19 29 1 14 16 29 12 23 20 8 9 7 20 20 9 14 13 38 13 47 6 17 11 17 38 36 17 19 15 25 27 11 26 25 18 44 23 27 19 9 2 9 16 8 46 3 29 14 13 12* 24 2 1 30 4 26 11 15 6 12 11 10 5 17 10 34 12 12 19 16 20 27 7 20 25 14 48 23 28 31 16 2 9 13 9 31 3 18 10 18 13 3 23 17 20 10 9 9 17 3 14 5 26 10 30 7 17 17 23 29 19 12 11 31 23 13 19 13 18 39 15 20 26 7 4 8 U 8 23 10 10 12 9 6 78 59 39 30 23 23 42 11 29 21 112 31 90 4 32 48 33 77 73 30 46 32 95 83 26 71 34 40 140 46 11 12 10 18 2 15 12 77 12 40 1 13 4 20 48 34 17 12 12 43 61 15 40 22 26 57 33 17 44 13 21] 21 21 44 11 13 2 1 44 1 32 29 39 14 9 13 24 5 4 7 69 4 41 17 12 12 43 33 20 14 8 48 35 10 41 7 30 72 22 29 64 8 1 6 34 17 20 24 12 50 12 23 1 18 29 10 8 2 4 5 2 5 3 34 2 13 3 11 2 8 17 13 4 3 4 11 36 18 5 10 24 17 3 7 16 9 6 1 12 9 10 3 25 9 5 2 2 4 1 2 3 17 5 1 5 1 3 11 7 4 1 3 17 13 1 13 1 2 29 3 7 14 3 1 11 4 5 1 11 7 13 2 4 1 1 1 1 2 1 3 11 1 12 520 136 55 616 82 558 468 384 258 284 210 425 175 277 217 748 300 278 383 283 674 809 340 482 281 676 672 304 605 360 365 .,006 404 493 695 244 63 209 432 248 587 43 486 261 525 283 3,445 611 206 6,951 391 5,878 8,185 5,327 3,631 1,933 2,371 3,040 1,088 2,127 1,969 9,355 1,664 6,246 519 3,713 2,131 2,463 ^189 5,830 2,323 3,076 2,392 7,124 10,108 1,764 7,076 2,199 3,901 11, 086 3,947 3,625 10, 349 2,384 313 1,382 4,445 2,791 4,177 268 4,910 3,413 5,140 2, 115 236 NORTH CAROLINA, SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. COUNTIES. NUMBEE OF SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. 3 o Eh o Macon Mndison Martin McDowell Mecklentinrg .. Montgomery... Moore Nasb New Hanover . Northampton.. Onslow Orange Pasquotank . . . Perquimans ■■- Person Pitt Polk Handolph Hicbmond Robeson Rockingham... Rowan Rutherford Sampson Stanly Stokes Surry Tyrrel Union Wake Warren Washington . . . Watauga Wayne Wilkes Wilson Yadkin Yancey Total. 65 129 70 124 73 50 134 74 43 82 137 22 108 81 113 11] 102 84 91 56 51 57 43 93 210 58 100 58 87 37 23 6,440 9 36 36 103 28 81 60 35 90 44 23 48 85 9 59 49 71 67 64 44 70 20 31 30 40 52 134 39 26 7 56 32 62 24 5 4,017 11 5 22 19 96 13 37 36 71 S4 20 61 34 31 34 63 11 37 51 64 54 49 28 51 27 24 23 30 49 94 40 13 5 36 22 44 17 9 3,068 2 25 11 59 18 47 37 61 31 41 63 26 17 29 61 5 33 29 45 41 40 19 63 17 17 14 15 40 101 27 14 1 38 21 31 12 3 2,546 4 2 19 17 63 11 24 26 63 27 12 41 20 17 42 41 4 21 23 37 40 31 33 43 14 11 14 '9 20 79 39 21 2 38 15 33 14 3 2,245 22 28 19 14 40 43 4 9 28 45 33 27 23 38 13 13 12 11 20 63 27 13 3 30 20 21 10 1 1,887 12 22 11 9 10 6 13 63 14 13 1 23 12 21 5 1 1,619 3 3 22 4 42 9 17 22 36 25 14 29 14 13 19 45 4 10 23 32 21 35 18 27 5 11 -8 10 19 51 22 14 1 18 8 19 3 1 1,470 3 52 26 77 22 37 51 110 68 37 76 36 30 70 101 11 103 84 47 41 111 15 28 16 22 39 146 78 18 2 73 13 52 14 8 4,044 2,029 30 11 14 1 14 4 1 870 474 423 188 118 46 213 846 938 542 313 665 348 259 488 817 88 343 498 671 630 520 351 679 202 246 210 210 387 1,195 564 222 31 532 228 446 162 62 34,658 519 213 4,309 1,305 6,541 1,833 2,518 4,680 10, 331 6,804 3,499 5,108 2,983 3,558 5,195 8,473 620 1,645 5,453 5,455 6, 318 3,930 2,391 7,028 1,169 2,469 1,246 1,597 2,246 10, 733 10, 401 2,465 104 5,451 1,208 3,496 1,436 331, 059 SOUTH CAROLINA. 237 SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. NtJMBER OP SLAVEHOLDEKS AND SLAVES. DISTRICTS. 1 S 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Abbeville Anderson Barnwell Beaufort Charleston Chester Chesterfield ... Clarendon Colleton Darlington Edgefield Fairfield Georgetown . . . Greenville Horry Kershaw Lancaster Laurens Lexington . Marion Marlborough ... Newberry Orangebnrgh... Pickens Richland Spartanburgh . . Sumter Union Williamsbnrgh . York 182 180 150 78 513 129 53 95 61 238 214 55 57 136 51 49 107 144 113 118 68 120 98 109 63 199 71 93 49 170 116 144 81 295 57 71 88 134 65 48 89 31 24 S3 100 72 119 51 74 84 58 38 110 64 61 37 131 95 92 91 43 244 66 40 28 52 85 102 47 29 67 28 35 55 80 52 51 38 72 82 38 46 94 59 S5 25 99 49 40 59 66 97 SO 9 54 18 26 36 68 50 59 35 45 71 52 43 6S 48 35 22 77 73 64 70 49 126 59 18 67 71 50 45 142 38 18 17 32 32 77 39 12 SI 14 16 22 46 24 31 22 44 51 25 30 54 30 35 18 54 67 58 62 44 109 40 15 17 30 25 85 36 14 35 6 15 19 46 16 27 19 34 45 25 29 45 44 25 17 46 51 37 48 28 105 40 16 14 36 28 65 33 16 33 6 12 13 53 20 46 17 40 42 25 12 36 24 19 12 46 222 132 137 101 335 135 54 S6 97 88 222 112 46 103 25 50 5S 154 84 102 61 133 127 62 92 132 122 79 73 143 120 S7 102 87 164 62 26 34 S4 43 129 77 33 S4 9 38 35 112 38 57 26 71 100 26 49 66 54 31 40 122 51 112 102 126 59 29 41 95 50 108 86 36 42 9 31 30 84 37 64 46 77 110 19 46 68 71 66 51 56 73 41 S 27 73 60 15 7 22 49 23 53 31 18 12 3 8 8 16 9 15 16 28 32 8 14 7 40 21 32 16 Total. 3,763 2,533 1,731 1,541 1,366 973 3,334 1,876 1,984 487 363 56 ^l\^ 1,467 1,103 1,198 1,070 2,880 909 411 537 968 939 1,681 822 481 819 247 373 528 1,093 609 846 489 937 1,069 520 604 1,-007 822 676 491 26, 701 20,502 8,425 17, 401 32,530 37, 290 10, 868 4,348 8,S66 32,307 11, 877 24, 060 15,534 18, 109 7,049 2,359 7,841 S,650 1.1, 200 6,202 9,951 6,893 13, 695 16, 583 4,195 11, 005 8,240 10, 682 10, 801 10, 259 9,984 402, 406 238. TENNESSEE, SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. COUNTIES. NUMBER OF SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. Anderson . . . Bedford Benton Bledsoe Blount Bradley Campbell Cannon Carroll Carter Cheatham . . . Claiborne Cocke Coffee Cumberland . Davidaon Decatur DeKalb Dickson Dyer Fayette Fentress Franklin Gibson GUes Grainger Greene. Grundy , Hamilton Hancock Hardeman Hardin , Hawkins Haywood Henderson... Henry Hickman Humphreys . . Jackson Jefferson Johnson Knox Lauderdale . . . Lawrence . . . . Lewis Lincoln MoNairy McMinn 25 185 31 27 50 58 16 59 173 29 70 30 39 80 12 574 32 62 37 125 99 22 132 219 232 47 88 25 78 21 93 62 66 124 105 139 81 70 57 55 21 115 59 75 10 182 83 132 12 136 13 19 39 46 9 35 112 13 35 18 33 60 6 36 30 43 92 8 91 138 161 23 61 7 38 13 77 48 41 93 62 82 39 50 36 45 7 59 34 40 4 124 15 97 12 8 21 28 7 16 73 9 24 21 23 25 3 207 15 30 34 41 89 9 45 114 115 20 44 4 31 8 69 30 32 72 42 76 36 35 25 40 6 36 24 29 7 99 40 35 14 95 15 7 24 30 3 21 53 3 22 7 18 22 3 168 8 23 35 35 69 3 38 21 7 30 9 49 23 21 59 45 49 31 23 27 37 5 49 26 14 4 70 31 38 8 72 10 7 22 23 7 11 49 7 19 8 10 28 2 160 14 17 33 32 66 4 37 70 73 16 20 7 25 3 43 20 30 65 37 56 19 24 16 30 3 40 19 13 3 79 24 27 8 9 11 12 1 4 38 1 22 6 11 16 2 116 7 13 17 12 58 1 36 53 78 14 14 1 18 6 33 17 18 41 31 56 16 17 14 21 7 31 19 16 2 44 20 13 53 5 4 13 7 7 n 30 2 12 19 8 11 1 85 4 16 24 21 52 1 26 57 64 13 13 3 13 54 46 1 1 20 24 50 47 52 42 4 7 7 10 2 2 12 7 2 1 27 24 11 15 16 12 52 33 23 15 31 27 10 8 8 3 6 8 15 8 2 3 16 8 14 11 3 7 1 33 34 21 12 21 11 15 13 30 176 5 48 83 144 18 17 3 23 3 70 17 35 102 43 22 19 13 2 40 41 17 6 115 13 14 1 2 5 1 76 2 4 15 18 103 110 980 113 115 341 250 62 278 139 172 308 33 2,153 136 236 310 415 1,124 55 561 1,011 1,243 199 307 63 287 67 672 280 311 894 476 716 306 279 .230 349 60 447 313 234 42 905 356 414 583 6,744 534 689 1,363 1,173 366 974 4,064 374 1,882 743 849 1,529 121 14, 790 784 1,025 2,201 2,641 15, 473 187 3,551 6,141 10,848 1,065 1,297 266 1,419 246 7,236 1,623 1,923 11,026 3,283 5,530 1,753 1,463 1,212 2,096 233 2,370 2,854 1,160 247 6,847 1,900 1,909 TENNESSEE. 239 SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. COUNTIES. NUMBER OF SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. Macon Mftdison Marion MarBboll Maury Meigs Monroe Montgomery. Morgan Obion Overton Perry Polk Putnam Rhea Roane Robertson . . . Rutherford . . Scott Sevier Sequatchie . . Shelby Smith Stewart Sullivan Sumner Tipton Union Van Buron . . Warren Washington . Wayne Weakley White Williamson... Wilson Total., 54 118 31 141 S51 29 56 135 11 189 80 27 26 36 18 65 140 239 3 36 7 492 134 51 66 160 74 18 9 80 75 74 149 72 196 272 7,820 27 104 25 82 142 18 45 95 5 74 38 14 8 22 14 42 97 115 230 85 36 37 115 57 13 2 45 24 33 97 32 U9 212 4,738 101 5 76 144 9 30 63 57 30 12 4 22 11 32 75 107 2 5 6 194 54 39 31 84 41 11 7 31 36 16 81 31 81 138 3,609 19 72 11 76 106 12 21 90 1 39 19 18 7 10 10 19 74 87 1 4 4 154 55 77 34 2 1 30 25 20 60 24 82 102 56 7 2 123 40 18 17 56 23 2 3 28 17 17 49 17 70 95 3,012 2,536 12 54 5 40 72 8 11 49 1 25 9 10 5 5 5 11 46 81 121 54 14 22 45 28 4 2 31 16 14 44 12 63 76 2,066 1,783 38 3 30 61 5 7 33 2 21 6 6 1 6 2 14 31 38 24 126 12 75 194 7 21 129 178 1 10 1 205 68 SI 16 133 73 2 6 38 10 24 61 12 165 148 5 33 108 4 14 56 1 18 6 2 1,565 3,779 1,744 1 53 5 20 103 4 7 78 1 10 3 1 23 100 1 102 17 15 3 51 34 15 12 124 706 1,501 116 255 956 25 516 248 118 74 146 103 273 789 1,316 10 96 34 2,056 654 277 r 246 951 489 57 36 367 236 240 686 243 1,207 1,325 929 10, 012 678 4,480 14, 654 638 1,600 9,554 120 2,399 1,087 548 434 683 615 1,748 4, 861 12, 984 59 538 201 16, 953 4,228 2,415 1,074 7,700 5,288 182 239 2,320 952 1,269 4,213 1,145 12,367 7,964 643 284 219 116 40 6 36,844 275,719 240 TEXAS. SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. COUNTIES. NUMBER OP SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. r.. 1 1 1 '3 in 1 to 1 00 1 s o 1 a 1 a § 1 a p •a s' s 1 1 1 s s 8 % 1 1 1 § i J •d § s u 1 -a 1 H 1 1 Anderson 85 24 16 44 2 68 71 15 4 43 2 27 35 12 4 28 36 16 1 14 25 8 4 14 27 7 1 16 17 4 1 12 1 9 20 6 19 1 60 13 1 51 23 5 30 24 4 1 22 6 7 2 1 1 1 459 116 33 324 5 • 274 3 668 "? Angelina 686 T 4 Austin 8 18 9 7 3 a 3 3,914 n fi Bastrop 21 15 16 15 17 7 24 19 17 8 8 1 2 2,591 7 Baylor* R Bee 16 41 105 3 17 50 3 22 31 2 16 21 3 21 13 5 10 13 2 8 13 2 8 5 5 3 1 20 22 7 7 1 2 9 38 179 294 79 <) Bell 2 1,005 1,395 98 in 1 1 11 Blancot 19 Bosque 13 21 2G 27 8 23 17 22 7 14 14 14 3 23 14 8 5 8 13 6 3 10 4 3 3 13 6 4 4 12 4 2 3 9 2 3 23 29 9 2 14 20 5 1 22 18 7 1 8 U 2 51 201 232 118 293 n Bowie 6 18 1 6 6 2 3 S 1 2,S51 5,110 1,063 14 Brazoria 9 1 1 IS ifi 17 Buchanan 1 47 19 72 32 5 52 14 92 1 26 15 28 18 1 36 6 69 2 16 12 23 17 24 6 30 10 1 14 6 18 9 1 10 5 1 16 4 24 7 7 228 69 254 106 6 354 69 456 32 1R Burleson 12 3 6 3 13 1 9 5 12 3 11 2 15 12 6 3 1 1 2,003 235 11 Burnet sn Caldwell 13 2 8 1 5 1 1 1,610 414 ai w Cameron 7 93 Cass 37 5 43 30 6 32 21 5 35 23 4 21 20 3 20 14 3 24 9 6 15 43 10 50 23 3 21 27 2 23 11 1 4 4 1 5 2 2 3,475 513 94 Chambers S5 2 3,246 ?fi Clayt 27 Collchan* i>« Collin 70 40 25 21 21 19 6 7 9 14 3 5 240 1,047 S9 Coleman* an Colorado 58 3 14 44 4 3 18 3 20 5 20 2 12 2 1 16 16 8 27 3 15 1 24 4 10 6 6 3 4 306 22 25 3,559 193 61 31 Comal 3a Comanche 2 33 Concho* 34 Cook 22 23 56 10 14 43 10 15 31 6 6 SO 8 5 13 2 4 11 2 5 8 2 3 11 3 1 6 4 4 16 2 1 10 2 1 74 81 228 369 306 1,074 35 Coryell 36 Dallas 3 37 DawsonJ 3R r>fiTnTnit* . 39 Denton.. 32 33 21 28 14 16 3 31 6 13 4 13 3 7 1 6 3 2 22 15 1 6 87 201 251 1,643 40 DeWitt 3 1 2 2 41 Duval* 42 EastlandJ 43 Edwards* 44 Ellis 47 36 29 1 14 11 1 10 4 1 10 5 13 e 6 1 2 196 3 1,104 15 45 El Paso 46 Ensinalt 47 Erath 6 27 81 122 29 40 2 69 3 23 92 70 60 40 7 3 11 41 51 20 31 8 18 41 40 14 24 1 8 20 38 15 26 3 11 28 35 6 18 1 11 14 29 13 12 2. 21 26 61 39 26 2 5 10 40 25 20 ... 26 158 308 514 260 307 2 288 7 119 384 236 505 202 12 lis 1,716 1,721 3,786 4,127 3,613 2 1,520 33 843 4R Falls 11 14 21 12 16 6 15 15 14 14 3 7 17 12 23 14 4 19 21 28 3 4 18 13 14 6 1 5 12 5 1 2 3 9 4 1 1 49 Fannin 50 Payette Fort Bend 51 3 4 2 2 1 52 Freestone 53 Frio 54 Galveston Gillespie 45 22 39 29 81 24 1 38 1 12 38 20 32 12 1 29 20 18 11 7 1 3 12 8 23 6 7 1 2 7 6 16 6 22 1 11 49 11 74 18 13 7 1 1 .... .55 56 Goliad 15 24 25 41 21 2 5 30 20 28 19 8 19 20 30 4 1 2 10 11 16 12 5 30 4 27 15 8 12 10 31 16 2 9 8 1 5 1 4 1 57 Gonzales 58 Grayson 4 1 1 2 1,292 5,468 1,748 26 .59 Grimes 24 6 12 1 .... 60 Guadalupe Hamilton 61 62 Hardemaji* .... .... ff.) Hardin 10 5 4 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 35 191 TEXAS. 241 SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. NUMBER OP SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. COUNTIES. i ■3 i 1 1 i: ■3 i s "ml CO 1 1 CX) i 1 1 o 1 in 8 § § o s o 1 d s 1 8 1 Li 1 1 8 CO d 8 i 1 i o i 1 1 1 1 64 108 91 22 81 60 8 39 61 6 28 52 7 30 48 7 20 32 8 15 25 3 12 28 3 6 27 3 23 103 10 17 41 8 11 71 7 3 32 2 1 15 1 1 19 395 713 95 2,053 65 6 2 8,784 fifi Hays 797 67 Haskell* 68 Henderson ' 34 Hiaalgo 1 HiU 1 19 HopkiTia j 72 Houston 61 Hunt ! 42 Jack 1 7 Jackson ! 25 Jasper 25 Jefferson 18 Johnson ! 43 Jones* ' 24 13 9 13 11 6 4 4 19 7 5 2 3 1 155 1 118 235 335 142 19 155 170 70 129 1, 11'6 1 70 71 72 73 74 75 71) 77 78 79 60 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 22 43 44 26 5 28 25 13 23 22 26 34 15 2 14 17 10 11 13 17 26 15 2 13 19 6 io 7 17 28 6 1 12 11 4 13 8 14 16 9 1 2 5 3 3 6 9 10 5 8 4 3 9 3 10 11 6 1 9 5 3 4 1 7 7 5 9 13 38 9 3 3 23 3 3 3 24 1 1 1 4 1 650 990 3 4 2 2,819 577 50 6 7 3 3 15 17 5 6 10 8 1 2 7 15 1 2 4 6 1 3 1 3 1,194 1,611 309 513 Karnes ; 20 Kaufman ! 49 Kerr 8 TTimhlA* 10 25 1 2 8 11 8 3 9 5 5 1 5 4 4 5 2 5 6 1 1 1 64 128 14 327 4 2 1 533 49 1 i 92 8 60 6 52 5 28 5 30 2 27 2L 2 14 5 1 33 1 26 17 1 10 1 2 2 419 32 2,833 Lampassas 153 38 75 26 32 13 19 1 6 25 18 12 22 2 1 21 31 11 20 1 1 8 19 11 12 1 4 l2 19 6 9 12 8 8 17 5 ]3 7 1 8 12 5 8 26 41 15 15 17 25 8 5 15 16 9 2 1 2 4 2 2 2 1 1 3 1 2 1 217 320 136 182 U 21 1,707 2,620 ^ 1,079 92 93 94 95 2 1,072 4 1 85 1 54 McLennan | 55 26 27 18 26 10 11 13 12 24 21 12 5 4 4 2 270 2,395 97 98 99 100 23 38 3 23 1 8 12 25 3 11 12 20 8 11 19 1 13 2 15 1 7 8 10 3 10 2 5 3 9 11 24 3 13 2 9 1 7 2 4 1 4 96 213 .8 125 1 22 675 1 2,017 18 Matagorda 3 3 1 2 17 7 6 6 4 5 7 2 2,107 101 102 1 5 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 106 104 57 5 30 91 62 30 13 18 12 76 31 57 4 66 16 34 34 2 27 54 29 12 13 7 2 79 14 ,45 31 2 14 43 26 13 10 5 3 . 46 3 29 28 1 S3 32 14 11 2 12 1 37 5 20 20 2 14 25 19 7 3 1 1 34 4 24 17 1 9 14 19 4 2 8 1 25 1 17 11 11 3 24 14 4 3 1 1 259 13 232 383 251 127 52 64 29 445 70 357 4 353 43 188 1,542 33 Montgomery Nacogdoches 8 13 10 6- 3 4 2 18 3 12 10 15 5 5 3 1 2 13 3 10 6 14 9 4 1 20 2 12 30 43 29 19 1 1 4 55 3 46 19 16 12 5 3 1 27 1 18 20 19 5 8 1 11 3 6 1 2 6 1 2 1 1 2,811 2,359 107 108 109 2 2 1 2 1,890 1,013 216 111 3 1 392 130 113 13 9 1 2 3,058 222 115 28 22 7 8 1 1 4,198 Presidio 4 31 10 18 34 1 14 34 6 10 26 2 8 19 1 7 20 1 5 12 4 14 2 5 40 2 30 23 2 18 19 2 4 7 2 3,039 118 234 119 17 5 9 1 1 2 2,258 IMU J^Ugk 136 19 16 11 2 65 16 18 9 4 69 13 13 5 5 66 15 6 3 2 63 14 12 2 3 37 8 11 4 39 4 13 1 1 26 8 3 27 7 2 89 10 13 1 1 45 10 13 45 4 8 18 2 8 3 3 6 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 734 135 144 36 20 6, 13'^ laa 1, 150 123 San Augustine San Patricio 1,717 95 124 I'A 1 1 89 12fi San Saba ' 31 242 TEXAS. SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. COUNTIES. NUMBER OP SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. 1 1 i 1 n 1 .9" 1 I '3 CO 1 DQ 1 CO 1 in s i !3 1 8 1 1 s cj 1 1 d d 1 I 1 i § o ! 1 -CJ 1 3- 3 1 i 127 Shackleford ....... 1 12 25 1 208 575 6 9 128 Shelby 32 109 6 38 69 19. 63 11 44 10 28 15 29 15 28 10 20 18 59 15 35 8 31 4 19 1 10 1,476 4,988 Q 129 Smitli 5 1 130 Starr i:ii Tarrantt 850 13^ Taylor* 133 Throckmorton J .... 134 Titus 84 83 33 49 96 2 24 29 70 94 47 73 16 35 57 14 18 42 60 42 43 23 20 44 1 8 20 33 37 30 31 17 14 40 , 20 25 10 10 31 15 22 7 13 27 17 10 6 8 21 1 3 10 18 31 16 14 3 6 18 9 16 2 4 15 43 50 10 17 53 6 23 11 7 33 14 22 5 10 27 7 7 1 4 16 1 1 5 352 425 145 197 480 4 75 184 376 627 2,438 3,13G 959 135 1 1 13fi Trinity 137 Tyler 1,148 3,794 27 138 Upshur . .......... 1 1 131 Uvalde 140 VanZandt Victoria 12 21 25 40 2 14 25 40 2 14 23 22 3 8 12 30 2 9 4 20 3 18 40 71 7 25 57 1 6 28 58 5 8 34 1 s 8 15 322 141 1,413 4,135 7,941 143 Walker 8 8 6 6 1 4 143 Washington Webbt 144 145 Wharton 10 42 20 59 8 5 39 13 22 6 6 18 8 18 5 21 3 14 5 10 11 2 10 2 9 8 4 16 4 6 3 10 2 2 6 3 5 18 15 10 7 20 1 6 2 6 6 4 4 128 181 53 186 26 2,734 891 14R Williamson Wise 147 148 Wood 3 5 2 16 1 4 6 2 1 1,005 141 150 Zapata} 151 ZavolaJ Total 4,593 2,874 2,093 1,782 1,439 1,125 928 790 668 2,237 1,186 1,095 491 241 194 88 52 2 21,878 182 566 * No return. f Estimated. tNoalavea. VIRGINIA. 243 ILAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. COUNTIES. NUMBEK OP SIiAVEHOLDEES AND SLAVES. Accomack Albflmarle Alexandria Alleghany Amelia Amherst Appomattox — Augusta Bfirbour Bath Bedford Berkeley Boone Botetourt Braxton Brooke BrunBwick Bnch.lnan Buckingham... Cabell Calhoun Campbell Caroline Carroll Clay Charles City . . . Charlotte Chesterfield Clarke Craig Culpeper Cumberland . . . Dinwiddle Doddridge Elizabeth City . Essex Fairfax Fauquier Fayette Floyd Fluvanna Franklin Frederick Grilmer Giles Gloucester Goochland Grayson Greenbrier Greenville Greene Halifax Hampshire Hancock Hardy Hanovor Harrison Henrico Henry HighTand IsleofWight... Jackson 250 289 52 38 77 116 88 149 18 25 5 55 9 8 145 106 25 1 643 87 31 63 62 73 40 70^ 7 64 45 151 116 19 37 89 274 105 99 36 61 23 37 121 61 105 140 69 23 33 77 55 114 8 13 128 55 8 41 4 3 87 1 62 19 1 214 58 18 1 15 43 67 26 23 46 39 207 7 34 26 59 84 9 37 55 131 56 3 28 53 67 21 32 33 21 90 46 63 I Jamos City . 31 137 56 670 71 39 122 8 32 18 110 76 79 39 12 45 63 39 71 8 10 102 33 S 29 1 73 151 48 10 18 50 65 26 10 57 29 124 1 25 26 60 66 9 11 36 71 53 5 17 38 49 14 22 27 18 67 27 110 47 5 1 10 25 52 19 7 42 14 98 1 19 45 90 48 11 59 171 4 18 56 80 64 96 1 11 142 36 3 32 S 23 26 12 87 58 104 1 24 15 105 100 3 1 28 88 125 50 6 95 66 149 34 57 51 137 6 7 55 107 33 7 51 71 10 25 29 32 156 7 35 22 2 2 34 19 117 5 13 55 11 199 37 7 38 1 21 11 55 15 167 23 6 36 21 9 48 8 118 24 5 21 1 11 11 116 29 8 as 1 ■10 21 172 ' 40 4 48 12 43 13 22 773 1,306 251 134 536 685 520 811 41 115 1,129 333 36 332 26 12 772 3 718 84 3 1,705 725 82 3 191 609 806 344 130 611 452 1,826 17 277 398 529 933 63 125 521 996 406 20 145 487 537 124 267 268 225 1,051 244 157 903 159 2,339 422 116 470 4,507 13, 91^ 1, 386 ' 990 7(655 6,278 4,600 5,616 95 946 10, 176 1,650 158 2,769 104 18 9,146 50 8,811 305 9 11, 580 10, 672 262 21 2,947 9, 238, . 8,354 I 3,375 420 6,675 6,705 12, 774 34 2,417 6,696 3,116 10,455 271 475 4,994 6,351 2,259 52 778 ,5, 736 6,139 547 1,525 4,167 1,984 14, 897 1, 213 2 1,073 9,483 582 20, 041 5,018 402 3,570 5S 2,586 244 VIRGINIA. SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. COUKTIES. NUMBER OP SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. i iH i 1 ■a CO 1 ■3 1 CO 1 1 00 ■3 Id i 8 S § d 1 a 8 1 -a s IS 1 S -d i s g i a a 1 § p 1 § 13 i 1 1 ■a 3 1 i 149 55 47 37 39 40 35 20 11 124 90 66 71 6 18 14 87 98 33 29 31 24 21 27 10 C 84 57 38 35 4 7 6 52 73 33 30 33 22 17 16 9 7 61 54 39 34 1 2 8 21 57 14 20 30 25 19 7 5 5 83 45 39 39 3 4 3 21 38 23 40 19 21 14 10 7 2 46 38 27 19 35 18 14 38 19 8 15 3 39 28 30 21 25 14 10 14 17 11 9 4 2 35 34 21 30 28 7 8 18 14 13 2 2 27 43 12 32 22 13 10 22 14 14 4 3 1 23 34 23 26 68 17 36 66 44 33 11 1 1 80 108 75 62 23 10 21 31 45 27 11 14 14 22 50 30 23 2 1 3 7 10 35 23 H 1 1 1 4 12 14 5 1 4 9 8 8 3 1 2 3 4 2 634 265 ,114 449 366 259 151 60 40 670 765 545 455 14 32 70 386 3,960 3,184 3,673 6,139 5, 525 2,869 824 King George King and Queen . . . King William 1 1 5 nft m Lee ... . 71 230 70 148 71 36 69 51 28 23 86 69 36 4 45 34 11 4 16 15 2 1 10 6 7 8 1 1 5,601 10, 194 7,fc 4,397 39 ^'\ Louisa Tl Lunenburg 7fi 1 77 Marshall 78 Marion . 1 14 29 63 7q Maaon 5 31 2 25 3 16 1 11 12 42 1 16 1 21 376 no Matthews ... 6 3 3 1 1 3,008 fi] R'> Mecklenburg 77 17 2.1 55 15 60 11 95 77 18 16 467 67 125 38 20 57 53 93 18 222 1 19 56 7 54 40 44 71 25 26 8 17 69 45 104 6 8 48 96 36 51 41 6:3 87 76 5 18 31 9 33 3 65 59 25 8 224 32 55 30 11 34 28 40 6 136 2 10 31 4 50 12 35 85 18 8 4 10 34 31 63 2 2 19 72 25 21 17 27 53 43 8 14 31 3 14 4 53 48 34 8 129 40 38 17 5 25 21 32 5 121 52 7 17 31 6 22 5 47 53 22 4 120 27 40 23 1 29 13 15 2 124 49 4 14 27 1 8 4 35 34 26 2 94 35 17 23 3 21 13 24 3 87 2 7 25 1 32 23 15 43 10 5 1 2 28 17 26 1 3 20 44 9 8 6 11 29 28 3 16 33 1 9 I 38 28 13 3 82 25 13 20 1 28 IS 20 4 79 32 6 14 13 25 5 4 7 39 1 4 13 98 6 28 22 2 11 61 1 15 11 80 3 14 11 38 21 20 10 10 1 760 66 204 283 37 196 30 619 554 291 46 1,464- 400 401 375 43 480 177 318 52 1,413 ' 5 64 375 20 582 344 273 506 157 93 21 56 398 259 420 12 23 259 569 171 127 117 318 4U4 12,420 362 83 84 Middlesex . 12 4 4 2 6 1 2 375 fl"! Montgomery .../... Monongalia 1 3,219 RFi 87 9 7 7 2 26 24 9 1 48 14 11 12 1 20 4 18 3 51 5 6 2 2 1 1 114 HH 94 Ht Nansemond Nelson 34 30 20 48 16 10 26 30 17 18 1 47 11 7 14 81 64 43 3 102. 49 26 45 1 76 18 31 2 153 51 34 32 42 39 23 13 30 9 4 10 1 5 8 4 1 5 3 5 481 qn 4 1 6,238 3,374 01 New Kent ")" Qrl Norfolk 52 37 19 32 31 33 21 31 16 9 8 18 2 3 6 19 2 1 14 9 004 1't Northampton Northumberland . .. Nottoway ... 1 2 11 1 2 2 3,872 3,439 6 468 1=1 <1fi . 1,099 490 15>3 Scott 1P4 Shenandoah Smyth.... 185 9 1 9 120 Southampton 6 4 4 .... .... .... 5,408 VIRGINIA. 245 SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. COUNTIES. NUMBER OF SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. ■3 1 1 1,031 7, 786. 631 3,314 188 2,515 428 6,384 47 112 223 1,202 5 20 8 18 • 51 212 91 1,019 229 1,S75 386 2,547 37 143 1 3 380 3,704 6 10 64 176 11 23 13 66 6 64 271 2,162 226 1,925 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 SpottsylTonia . . Stafford Surry Sussex Taylor , Tazewell Tucker Tyler Upshur Warwick Warren Washington ... Wayne Webster Wostmoreland- Wetzel Wood Wirt Wise Wyoming Wytho York 341 253 28 53 118 3 33 6 4 1 54 37 113 69 14 36 10 33 2 4 7 10 26 35 9 31 18 101 41 23 66 1 19 12 Total 11,085 5,989 4,474 3,807 3,233 2,824 2,393 1,984 1,788 5,686 3,088 3,017 1,291 503 243 105 8 1 52,128 490,863 * No slaves. 246 TERRITORIES. SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. DISTRICT OF coi.vmniA. NUMBER OF SLAVEHOLDERS AHD SLAVES. o „. ^ d J DISTEICT. •-< u ^< g 8 »4 ^^ '^ §5 1 1 i 1 1 1 o 1 1 1 1 1 SB 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 03 s g f3 J ■3 3 o 1 o -.1. fj I-f 1 Georgetown 119 41 25 36 32 1 6 4 2 4 1 1 232 577 2 Washington City .. Remainder of Dist.. Total SOT 164 71 46 25 21 g 5 3 6 859 1 774 3 26 20 16 10 16 9 9 3 6 10 6 6 1 138 834 6S4 225 112 73 53 31 24 12 11 20 7 7 1 1,229 3,185 IVKBRASKA. NUMBER OF SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. , ^ tn ■ COUNTIES. lU ^ ^ fei s s M ? ti M- ^ 2 ■ S IS !il s !R s v. H ^3 • o £9 _ ,-r t \ i 1 1 2 1 1 11 IC Salt Tjalca 8 2 1 19 / 8 3 1 1 12 29 RECAPITULATION — 18 60. 247 SLAVEHOLDEKS AND SLAVES. STATES. NUMBER OP SLAVEHOLDEKS AND SLAVES. i •3 ■s i ■* 1 1 U3 i s •3 I* 1 00 i 1 OS irj 1 s t-l •i ■d g 1 1 Alabama............... . * 5,607 281 237 863 6,713 2 9,306 4,092 4,119 4,856 6,893 6,440 3,763 7,820 4,593 11, 085 3,663 173 114 568 4,355 2,805 117 74 437 3,482 2,329 88 51 365 2,984 1,986 69 34 285 2,543 1,729 70 19 270 2,213 1,411 50 15 225 1,839 1,227 52 10 186 1,647 1,036 41 8 169 1,415 3,742 99 17 627 4,707 2,164 4.1 8 349 2,823 2 Arkansas............... T 4 Florida - 5 fi Kansas 7 5,430 2,573 1,952 3,201 3,754 4,017 2,533 4,738 2,874 5,989 4,009 2,034 1,279 2,503 2,773 3,068 1,990 3,609 2,093 4,474 3,281 1,536 1,023 2,129 2,243 2,546 1,731 3,012 1,782 3,807 2,694 1,310 815 1,809 1,686 2,245 1,541 2,536 1,439 3,233 2,293 1,103 666 1,585 1,384 1,887 l,3te 2,066 1,125 2,824 1,951 858 523 1,303 1,130 1,61? 1,207 1,783 928 2,393 1,582 771 446 1,149 877 1,470 1,095 1,565 791 1,984 1,273 609 380 1,024 640 1,228 973 1,260 667 1,788 3,691 2,065 1,173 3,432 1,734 4,044 3,334 3,779 2,237 I 5, 6?6 1, 580 1,157 545 2,057 666 2,029 1,876 1,744 1,186 3,088 R q Maryland. ....... 10 AOssissippi. n Missouri -..-----.-..... 1" North Carolina - n South Carolina............... 14 Tennessee ................................ 15 16 Virginia Total, States 76, 670 45,934 34, 747 28„907 24,225 20,600 17,235 14,852 12,511 1 40,367 21,315 TERKITOEIES. Diutrict of Columbia... --....... 1 654 1 8 225 4 2 112 72 53 31 1 24 12 11 20 7 9. Nebraska a Utah 1 1 663 231 112 72 53 32 25 12 11 21 Total States and Territories . - 77,333 46, 165 34,859 28,979 24,278 20, 632 17,260 14, 864 12, 522 40, 388 21,322 SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES— Continued. STATES. NUMBER OP SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES. 1 1 1 ! § 1 1 o fH i S .a a S § i 1 1 a 1 § C3 § 1 II 1 o 1 i 1 3,323 35 1,253 13 768 8 791 6 550 4 312 24 10 33,730 1,149 587 5,152 41, 084 a 38, 645 22,033 13, 783 30, 943 34, 320 34, 658 26,701 36, 844 21,878 52,128 435, 080 111,115 1,798 61,745 462, i98 2 3 4 Florida 333 2,910 171 1,400 99 739 116 729 42 373 45 181 2 33 7 1 n 7 1,093 1,241 487 2,322 349 1,977 1,984 1,623 1,095 3,017 296 ■695 179 1,143 120 870 1,083 648 491 1,291 96 413 81 755 33 474 579 284 341 609 51 560 75 814 26 483 710 319 194 503 12 469 34 545 8 188 487 116 88 243 6 460 15 279 4 118 363 40 52 105 1 63 28 225, 483 331,726 R7 181 g 20 1 8 4 9 10 1 436 631 114, 931 331,059 402,406 275, 7i9 182,566 490 865 11 56 6 2 8 4 22 i 7 1^ 16 Vircinia 1 20,789 \ 9, 648 5,179 5,217 3,149 1,980 224 74- 13 1. 383, 637 3, 950, 513 TEKRITOBIES. 1 2 3 7 1 1,229 6 12 3,185 ' 15 29 7 1 1,247 3,229 20,796 9,648 5,179 5,218 ' 3, 149 1,980 224 74 13 1 384,884 *3, 953, 743 ' Exclusive of 18 colored nppjenticcs for life, (in the State of New Jersey,) by the net to abolish slavery, passed April 18, 1846, 248 EE CAPITULATION — 1850. SLAVEHOLDERS. STATES. NUMBER OF OWNERS OP- 1 1 1 1 in 1 1 o S' 1 i 1 i § i 1 I s o i-T 1 a 1 i o 2 »■ % g < 1 5,204 1,383 320 699 6,554 9,244 4,797 4,825 3,640 5,762 1,204 3,492 7,616 1,935 11,385 760 7,737 1,951 352 991 11, 716 13,284 6,072 5,331 6,228 6,878 9,668 6, 164. 10,582 2,640 15,550 539 6,572 1,365 117 759 7,701 9,579 4,327 3,327 5,143 4,370 8,129 6,311 8,314 1,585 13, 030 136 5,067 788 20 588 6,490 5,022 2,652 1,822 4,015 1,810 5,898 4,955 4,852 1,121 9,456 39 3,524, 382 957 109 216 19 16 2 2 29, 295 5,999 2 3 4 Florida j 349 5,056 1,198 1,774 655 2,964 345 2,828 3,200 2,202 374 4,880 2 104 764 53 728 72 910 19 485 990 276 82 6^6 1 29 147 5 274 7 189 1 4 3,580 38, 456 38, 385 20, 670 16 040 ■•) Georgia ... .. 2S 2 € Kentuclty 7 36. 6 1 & 4 8 Maryland .' 9 Mississippi 18 1 12 69 2 1 8. 1, 23, 116 19, 185 28,303 £5,596 33, 864 10 Missouri 11 Nortli Carolina 76 382 19 9 107 3 29 1 12 South Carolina 2 2 13 Tennessee 14 Texas 15 Virginia.. ..-/ 1. 55,063 1,477 16 Columbia, District of Total... 68,820 105, 683 80, 765 54,595 29,733 6,196 1,479 187 56> 9 2 > 347,525 INDEX. PREFACE AND INTRODUCTION. Agbiculture : page. influence of railroads upon clxiv number of horses employed in clxv agricultural associations, societies, history of xili agricultural products by States and Territories, for 1850 and 1860, compared with population, tables of CXXIX agricultural products, demand for, increased by manufactures in the west XLII great want in American agriculture which occupies the place of the turnip in the English system of rotation LXxvil charlatans contrasted with real benefactors in iv farmers, interests of, not promoted by government in farmers desiring government to abstain from legislation relative to iv home consumption, how increased ill i< homestead free, by act of Congress vm home market, attractive, popular, and honorable in , . . m importance of, as a recourse for wealth Ill increase of demand stimulating husbandmen to efforts in iii laws, application of, not beneficial to in laws, political effect of nt prosperity of, in proportion to increase of population in policy best to pursue in .-. . . iv policy, present, to promote, (loss of time and disappointment) IV relation of produce to foreign markets in in short roads to fortune avoided by people engaged in iv supply at home, foreign demand for agricultural products in saving to government by institution illustrating character of trees and plants v in the United States viii-x implements of agriculture in use, value of table of x labor-saving appliances useful in xi labor in United States, scarcity of xii Xwar, effect on agriculture Xliii drill-husbandry, profit of, demonstrated by John Wynn Baker xin number of patented inventions for, previous to 1848 xii mechanical inventions stimulated by high price of labor in xi Barley : produced in the United States in 1860, table of Lxvin climate better adapted to production of wheat than of lxviii superior in England to any other country Lxvm total crop in States and "Perritories in 1860, of Lxvni raised in New England States in, 1860 compared with 1850 lxix raised in Middle States in 1860, compared with 1850 lxix raised in Western States in 1860, compared with 1850 lxix raised in Southern States in 1860, compared with 1850 lxx raised in Pacific States in 1860, compared with 1850 lxx raised in United States in 1860 and 1850, in proportion to population lxx culture of • ^'^^' 32 250 INDEX. PAOE. Beans and Peas, produced, (sec Peas and Beans) lxxiv Beeswax cviii Beet : climate of Southern and Western States favorable to growth of the ci leaves and pulp of the, used as a food for cattle t'l-ci v Beet Eoot : cultivation of cii description of cii analysis of, by Peligot cm table of; cost of; culture of in France cm statistics of, in Prance civ comparison of, with cane civ Buckwheat : produced in States and Territories in 1860 lxxi total production of, in States and Territories, from 1840 to 1860 LXXil raised in New England States in 1860, compared with 1850 LXXII raised in Middle States in 1860, compared with 1850 LXXII raised in Western States in ] 860, compared with 1850 LXXin raised in Southern States in 1860, compared with 1850 LXXiii raised in Pacific States in 1860, compared with 1850 LXXiii United States, 1850 and 1860, in proportion to population LXXIV rapid progress of, in California LXXiv Butter and Cheese : produced in States and Territories in 1860 , LXXXii made in New England States in 1860, compared with 1850 , Lxxxiii made in Middle States in 1860, compared with 1850 Lxxxui made in Western States in 1860, compared with 1850 Lxxxm made in Southern States in 1860, compared with 1850 Lxxxiv made in Pacific States in 1860, compared with 1850 lxxxiv United States, in proptirtion to population lxxxv California: cattle, (horned,) in CLXXi fruits, vegetables, and wool, of clxxi sheep, (Merino,) in clxxi sugar, (cane, Chinese,) in , clxxi wool, clip of CLXXI grain-trade of , , clviii Canals: tonnage, proportion of, in 1862 , CLXVI tonnage, different routes, proportion of clxvi Cattle : experience in, in Texas cxxxiv (English, ) first introduction of, into the West cxxxii general interest in improvement of, first manifested in 1832-'36 cxxxiii manner of raising or breeding of cxxxiii western trade of cxxix disease of, in this country cxix other, (see Live-stock) cxv Cheese and butter, (see Butter and Cheese) Lxxxii Cincinnati, shipments from, north and south, for four years clviii for 1826, 1835, 1853, and 1860, prices of produce in CLXViii Corn : • raised in United States, table of xlvi production of wheat compared with ^ xl vii production of, in principal corn-growing States in 1860, 1850, and 1840 XLVii in New England States in 1860, 1850, and 1840, together with population XLViii in Middle States in 1860, 1850, and 1840, together with population xlviii in Southern States in 1860, 1850, and 1840, together with population xlviii in Western States in 1860, 1850, and 1840, together with population XLix INDEX. 251 Corn — Continued : Pi OF.. in Pacific States in 1860, 1850, and 1840, together with population XLix rapid increase of, in California L in New England, Middle, Western, Southern, and Pacific States in 1860, ISSO, and 1840, together with number of inhabitants , . l bushels of in different sections United States to each inhabitant, in 1860, 1850, and 1840 l in United States to each inhabitant, 1860, 1850, and 1 840 li cultureof LU Cotton : amount of. United States, in 1850 and 1860 , xciii table of, amount raised in different States, 1850 and 1860 , '. . xciv amount of, exported from United States in 1792 xxvi bow-string operation of xxvn cotton-gins, history of. (See Implements, Agricultural) xxvr Dairy products Lxxxii Domestic animals. (See Live-stock) cviii, cix Exports of Flour and Grain : (see Flour and Grain :) from United States to foreign countries for the year ending June 30, 1862, table of CXXXVII, cxxxviii from United States to foreign countries from 1790 to 1817, table of cxxxix from New York to foreign countries CXLI from Boston to foreign countries CXLH from Philadelphia to foreign countries CXLII from Baltimore to foreign countries cxlii from Portland to foreign countries cxlii from Montreal for three years CLII from New Orleans to foreign ports CLVII from San Francisco to foreign countries CLIX of grain, flour, and meal from Eussia, 1857 to 1862, inclusive, table of CXLIII of breadstuffs compared to total domestic exports CXLI Farms : under actual cultivation in United States, value of XV Flax: produced in States and Territories, 1850 and 1860 LXXXix amount grown in New England States, 1860, compared with 1850 ■ xc amount grown in Midddle States, 1860, compared with 1850 xc amount grown in Western States, 1860, compared with 1850 xc amount grown in Southern States, 1860, compared with 1850 xci amount grown in Pacific States, 1860, compared with 1850 xci in different sections in proportion to population, in 1850 and 1860 xci small crop of, owing to scarcity of labor xcii climate of Northern States adapted to growth of Xc scarcity of cotton increasing culture of xc improvement in machinery for dressing fibre of xc Flax-seed : produced in United States in 1860 xcii produced in States and Territories in 1850 and 1860 xcii growth of, stimulated by high price of linseed oil xciii oil-cake, demand in England for ; also food for cattle and sheep xciii Flour and Grain : cxxxvu-clviii received at Buffalo for twenty-eight years cxLvin received at Oswego for sixteen years CXLVIII received at Toledo for five years , cxlix received at Montreal for three years clii received at Cincinnati for eighteen years clv received at St. Louis for fourteen years CLVi received at New Orleans for thirty-one years clvi shipped from Milwaukie for nineteen years CL shipped from Chicago for twenty-six years cxLix shipped from Lake Michigan eastward for six years eL 252 INDEX. Flouii and Grain — Continued : page. movement of, from west to east for eight years cli (products of America) exported to foreign countries cxxxvi Forest Trees : preservation of , CLxix as a protection against disease clxx neglect of beautiful native clxx Grain Trade : of the United States cxxx v exportation in , cxxxvi exportation in, to Great Britain and Ireland alone cxxxix in its infancy, as compared with Russia cxliv internal ; cxLiv exportation, compared with production, United States cxliv of the St. Lawrence river ci.ii with Europe direct, means to foster , CLiv of the Mississippi clv of the Upper Mississippi , clviii reciprocity treaty, and the CLi v between the lakes and Europe OLiii first shipment of grain from western shore of Lake Michigan cxlvii first shipment of grain from Wisconsin cxlvii Erie canal, new era in CXLV chief commerce of colonists before the Revolution CXL resources of lake-basin developed by opening of Galena and Chicago railroad to Fox river, in 1849 cxlvii all kinds of grain, total receipts of, at tide-water, by New York canals CXLVI wheat and flour, total receipts of, at tide-water, by New York canals CXLVI Chicago, shipments of grain from xlii Grapes : varieties of, (see Vineyards) clxii Honey: production of. United States, 1860 cviii proportion of, to beeswax cviii Hops: produced in United States in 1860 , xcv Horses: number and increase of in last twenty years, including asses and mules clxiv employed in agriculture, number of CLxiv employed in the five great States of the west, number of clxv diminished in number and importance by railroads CLXv Implements, Machinery, &c. : agricultural implements, United States, table of statistics of xi apparatus for separating grain from straw xxiii agricultural tools of America superior to those in common use in Europe xxv cotton-gins, manufacture of xxvi forks and hoes (American) in England xxv grain-cutting, first American patent for xx grain, harvesting of, by machinery xiv hay-rake, (revolving,) history of xxiii hay-unloading fork xxiii harvesting machine, produced in England and United States xxi hoes, improvement in, first American patent for xxv implements exhibited at the London exhibition Xiv instruments, manufacture of xiii labor-saving machinery, production of xv labor-saving machinery, total product in New England xv labor-saving machinery, total product in Middle States , xv labor-saving machinery, total product in Western States x vi labor-saving machinery, total product in Southern States x vi INDEX. 253 Implements, Machinery, &c. — Continued: page. machinery for threshing and cleaning xxiir mowers and reapers, history of xx mowers and reapers, earliest description of xx ploughs, history of xvi ploughs in England and Southern Europe xvi ploughs in Scotland xvi ploughs, improvements in xvi ploughs, patents granted for xviii ploughs, manufactories in United States . xix ploughs, by steam xix reaper, by McOormick xi v reaping machines, progress of; cutters of xxi reaping machines made, number of /xxii reapers and mowers, trial of xxi scythe and axe manufacture, introduction of xxili scythes, improvement in xxiii shovels, spades, hoes, and forks, manufacture of xxiv straw-cutters, improvement in xiv threshing and cleaning machines xxiii London Exhibition of Industry, (1851,) influence of xiv New York (Crystal Palace) Exhibition, 1853, 1854 xiv roller-gin, used in India xxvii treadle-gin, improvement in xxvii Whitney's saw-gin xxviii Imports of : wheat, corn, and flour, into Great Britain and Ireland, during past three years, table of cxi.iii agricultural products into United States from Canada, and into Canada from United States, value of CLV Indian Corn. (See Corn.) xlvi — lii Land : in farms, acres of, improved, unimproved, and cash value. United States, table of Vii area, fertile and waste, in acres Viii Lakes : tonnage on, during the past six years CXLVII Live Stock : asses and mules. States and Territories, 1850 and 1860 cxi asses and mules. New England States, 1860, as compared with 1850 cxi asses and mules. Middle States, 1860, as compared with 1850 ^ cxii asses and mules. Western States, 1860, as compared with 1850 cxii asses and mules. Southern States, 1860, as compared with 1850 cxii asses and mules, Pacific States, 1860, as compared with 1850 cxiii horses in States and Territories in 1850 and 1860 cix horses in New England States, 1860, as compared with 1850 cix horses in Middle States, 1860, as compared with 1850 ex horses in Western States, 1860, as compared with 1850 ex horses in Southern States, 1860, as compared with 1550 ex horses in Pacific States, 1860, as compared with 1850 cxi horses, number of to each inhabitant, in different sections in United States in 1850 and 1860 cxi milch cows and other cattle, in States and Territories in 1850 and 1860 ex v milch cows in New England States in 1860, as compared with 1850 cxv milch cows in Middle States, 1860, as compared with 1860 exvi milch cows in Western States, 1860, as compared with 1850 cxvi milch cows in Southern States, 1860, as compared with 1850 cxvu milch cows in Pacific States, 1860, as compared with 1850 cxvii milch cov/s, number of, to each 100 persons, in different sections, and United States exviii milch cows, amount of butter and cheese from each, in different sections, in 1860, as compared with 1850, and in States and Territories , cxix working oxen in States and Territories, in 1850 and 1860 exiu working oxen in New England States in 1860, as compared with 1850 cxii working oxen in M.ddle States in 1860, as compared with 1850 cxiv 254 INDEX. Live-stock — Continued: taov.. working oxen in Western States in 1860, as compared with 1850 cxiv working oxen in Southern States in 1860, as compared with 1850 , cmv working oxen in Pacific States in 1860, as compared with 1850 cxv working oxen, number of, to each 100 persons, in States and Territories, and in United States cxv sheep, number of, in United States in 1850 and 1860 cxx sheep in New England States in 1860, as compared with 1850 cxx sheep in Middle States in 1860, as compared with 1 850 _. . cxxi sheep in Western States in 1860, as compared with 1850 cxxr sheep in Southern States in 1860, as compared with 1850 cxxi sheep in Pacific States in 1860, as compared with 1850 cxxii sheep, number of, to each ope hundred persons, indifferent sections and United States and Territories cxxii sheep, amount of wool from each in United States and Territories in 1850 and 1860 ccxxii swine, number of, in States and Territories in 1850 and 1860 „ cxxiii swine in New England States in 1860, as compared with 1850 cxxiii swine in Middle States in 1860, as compared with 1850 cxxiii swine in Western States in 1860, as compared with 1850 cxxiv swine in Southern States in 1860, as compared with 1850 cxxiv swine in Pacific States in 1860, as compared with 1850 cxxv swine, number of, to each one hundred persons in United States and Territories in 1850 and ] 860 cxxv value of, in New England States in 1860, as compared with 1850 cxxvii value of, in Middle States in 1860, as compared with 1850 cxxvii value of, in Western States in 1860, as compared with 1850 cxxvii value of; in Southern States in 1860, as compared with 1850 cxxviii value of, in Pacific States in 1860, as compared with 1850 . . cxxviii value of, in United States in 1860 , cxxvi Manures, Soils, &c.: showing the value of manure from different food, table of xciii organic manures xxxvi organic manures, experiments by Lawes & Gilbert in xxxvi power of soils to absorb ammonia xxxviii power of soils to arrest ammonia , xxxviii plaster, ashes, and superphosphate of lime applied to soils xxxix turnip crop — a means of enriching the soil xxxix feeding sheep on clover to enrich soil xl exhausted soil, no phrase more common than ix exhaustion of soils, in what consists ix Molasses : cane , xcix maple xcix sorghum xcix cane, maple, and sorghum produced in the United States in 1860 xcix Oats : produced in the New England Stales in 1850 and 1860 LXiv produced in the Middle States in 1850 and 1860 LXV. produced in the United States in 1860, table of , . . . , LXiv culture of , • Lxvii Peas and Beans : in the New England States in I860, as compared with 1850 LXXV in the Middle States in 18G0, as compared with 1850 LXXV in the Western States in 1860, as compared with 1860 LXXVi in the Southern States in 1860, as compared with 1850 Lxxvi in the Pacific States in 1860, as compared with 1850 LXXVii in the United States in proportion to population Lxxvii produced in States and Territories in 1860 LXXiv produced in States and Territories in 1850 and 1860 , Lxxvi Pork Trade cxxxiv Potatoes, (Irish :) raised in the New England States in 1860, as compared with 1850 Lxxvni raised in the Middle States in 18G0, as compared with 1850 Lxxix INDEX. 255 Potatoes, (Irish) — Continued: page. raised in the Western States in 1S60, as compared with 1850 , lxxix raised in the Southern States in 1860, as compared with 1850 , lxxix raised in the Pacific States in 1860, as compared with 1850 Lxxx raised in different sections of the United States in proportion to population • lxxx raised in States and Territories in 1860 Lxxvm Potatoes, (Sweet:) produced in the United States in 1860 Lxxxi raised in States and Territories in 1860 and 1860 lxxxi great bulk of crop raised in Southern States lxxxi amount of, raised in southern States in 1860, compared with 1850 lxxxi Rice; cultivation of, confined to few States xcv produced in the United States in 1860 xciv threshed by steam-power ,. . . , xiv Railroads : advance of prices secured to producers by clxvi agricultural productions of interior States increased by clxvii transportation of foreign articles cheapened by clxviii influence of, on value of farming lands , CLXix positive advantages derived from CLXV miles of, built in six Western States between 1850 and 1860 cxlvii Rye: produced, table of, bushels of, iu 1860 lix raised in New England States in ] 860, as compared with 1850 lix raised in Southern States in 1860, as compared with 1850 lx raised in Pacific States in 1860, as compared with 1850 , lxi raised in New England States in 1850 and 1860 lxii produced in Middle States in 1850 and 1860 Lxii produced in Western States in 1850 and 1860 ., , Lxn produced in Southern States in 1850 and 1860 LXiii produced in Southern States to each inhabitant in 1850 and 1860 LXiii table of, United States, 1850 and 1860, compared with population lxi culture of, in United States lxi corn and wheat, produced in New England States in 1850 and 1860 lxii com and wheat, produced in United States, 1850 and 1860 lxiii Sorghum : cultivation of, stimulated by high prices of sugar c Sugar: cane and maple, produced in United States in 1850 and 1860 xcix cane, produced in United States in 1860 xcix maple, produced in United States in 1860 xcix beet ci beet-root ci extraction of, from beet cv, cvi beet, refining of cvii fabrication of, throughout the world, table of cv process of making c beet, cost of manufacture of cvii Tobacco : produced in United States in 1860 xcvi produced in New England States in 1860, as compared with 1850 xcvii produced in Middle States in 1860, as compared with 1850 xcvri produced in Western States in 1860, as compared with 1850 xcviii produced in Southern States in 1860, as compared with 1850 » xcvii produced in Pacific States in 1860, as. compared with 1850 xcvii Vineyards and Wine-making : in United States , . , CLix cultivation of, (see Grapes and Wine-making) CLXi 256 INDEX. Wheat: taot.. produced in United States, table of xxi x States in order of production of, 1850, and 1860 xxix production of, in proportion to population xxxi in New England States xxxi in Middle States xxxi in Western States xxxi in Southern States xxxi in non, and slaveholding States , xxxi . raised in United States in 1859 xlii exported to Great Britain in 1859 xlii exported in 1860 XLII shall we continue to export XLiii can the west supply increased demand for XLiii culture of, in California XLiv quality of, and climatic influences on XLiv hessian-fly in XL growing of, in the west , XLI essential to avoid the midge in xl the war gave buoyancy to prices of XLI high premium on gold afPects prices of XLI harvest in Great Britain and France in 1863 XLI English system of rotating crops of xxxix loss of ammonia by growth of xxxvii adaptation of soil in New England to xxxiii ravages of midge in xxxiii ravages of midge in, how to be avoided xxxv peas exceedingly useful as a crop to alternate with lxxv quality of, in western States xlv Western pkoduce: high prices for, and causes of XLii WiNE-MAKING CLXII Wool: produced in United States in 1860 Lxxxvi produced, total of, United States, in 1840, and 1850 Lxxxvi produced in New England States in 1860, as compared with 1850 Lxxxvii produced in Western States in 1860, as compared with 1850 Lxxxvii produced in Middle States in 1860, as compared with 1850 o lxxxvii produced in Southern States in 1860, as compared with 1850 Lxxxviii produced in Pacific States in 1860, as compared with 1850 Lxxxviii produced in different sections United States, as compared with population lxxxix STATES AND TERRITORIES, BY COUNTIES. ALABAMA: Animals slaughtered 5 Asses and mules 2 Barley 4 Beeswax 5 Buckwheat - 4 Butter 4 Cattle : cows, milch -. 8 oxen, working ". 2 other cattle 2 Cheese 4 Clover-seed 4 INDEX. 257 A L A B A M A— Continued : p ^ ^ ^ Corn 3 Cotton, bales of, ginned 3 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of I93 cash value of 2 number of 1850, 1860 222 Farming implements, in use, value of 2 Flax 5 Flax-seed 5 Grass-seeds 4 Hay 4 Honey 5 Hops 4 Horses 2 Land, improved , 2 unimproved 2 Live-stock, number of — estimated 192 value of 3 Manufactures, value of, home-made, value of 5 Market garden products 4 Molasses, cane 5 sorghum 5 Oats., 3 Orchard products, value of 4 Peas and beans 3 Potatoes, Irish and sweet ^ 3 Rice 3 Kye 3 Sheep '. , 2 Silk cocoons 5 Slaveholders, number of 223 Slaves, number of 223 Sugar, cane 5 maple 5 Swine 3 Tobacco 3 Wheat 3 Wine 4 Wool 3 ARKANSAS: Animals slaughtered 9 Asses and mules 6 Barley 8 Beeswax 9 Buckwheat 8 Butter 8 Catttle : cows, milch ^ 6 oxen, working 6 other cattle 6 Cheese 8 Clover-seed » 8 Com 7 Cotton, bales of, ginned 7 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and pver, number of 193 cash value of 6 number of, 1850-60 222 33 258 INDEX ARKANSAS— Continued: page. Farming implements, in use, value of 6 Flax 9 Flax-seed 9 Grass-seeds 8 Hay 8 Hemp, tons of: dew-rotted 9 water-rotted 9 other prepared 9 Honey 9 Hops 8 ■< Horses 6 Land, improved 6 unimproved 6 Live stock, number of — estimated 192 value of V Manufactures, home-made, value of 9 Market garden products, value of 8 Molasses, maple , 9 sorghum 9 Oats 7 Orchard products, value of ' 8 Peas and beans V Potatoes, Irish and sweet 7 Eice 7 Eye 7 Sheep 6 SUk cocoons ^ 9 Slaveholders, number of 224 Slaves, number of 224 Sugar, maple 9 Swine 7 Tobacco ^ 7 Wheat : 7 Wine 8 Wool 7 CALIFORNIA: Animals slaughtered - 13 Asses and mules 10 Barley 12 Beeswax 13 Buckwheat 12 Butter 12 Cattle : cows, milch 10 oxen, working , ^. 10 other cattle 10 Cheese 12 Olover-seed 12 Corn 11 Counties, number of .' 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 194 cash value of 10 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements, in use, value of 10 Grass-seeds ^ 12 Hay 12 INDEX. 259 CALIFORNIA— Continued: faoe. Honey 13 Hops „ 12 Horses 10 Land improved 10 unimproved 10 Live stock, number of — estimated 1 92 value of 11 Manufactures, home-made, value of 13 Market garden products, value of. 12 Molasses, maple 13 sorghum 13 Oats 11 Orchard products, value of 12 Peas and beans 11 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 11 Rice 11 Rye 11 Sheep 10 Swine 11 Tobacco 11 Wheat 11 Wine 12 Wool 11 CONNECTICUT: Animals slaughtered 15 Asses and mules -. 14 Barley 14 Beeswax 15 Buckwheat J 4 Butter 14 Cattle : cows, milch 14 oxen, working 14 other cattle 14 Cheese 14 Clover-seed 14 Corn 15 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 194 cash value of 14 number of 1850-'60 222 Farming implements, iu use, value of 14 Flax 15 Flax-seed 15 Grass-seeds 14 Hay 14 Hemp, dew-rotted 15 Honey 15 Hops 14 Horses 14 Land, improved 14 unimproved 14 Live stock, number of — estimated , 192 value of . > 15 Manufactures, home-made, value of , 15 Market garden products, value of 14 Molasses, maple. 15 sorghum 15 260 INDEX. CONNECTICUT— Continued: pag^ Oats 15 Orchard products, value of ; 14 Peas and beans 15 Potatoes, Irisli and sweet 15 Eye 15 Sheep 14 Silk cocoons 15 Sugar, maple 15 Swine 15 Tobacco 15 Wheat : 15 Wine 14 Wool 15 DELAWARE: Animals slaughtered 17 Asses and mules , 16 Barley .16 Beeswax 17 Buckwheat 16 Butter 16 Cattle : cows, milch 16 oxen, working 16 other cattle - 16 Cheese 16 Clover-seed 16 Corn 17 Counties, number 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 195 cash value of 16 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements, in use, value of 16 Flax 17 Flax-seed 17 Grass-seeds 16 Hay 16 Honey , 17 Hops 16 Horses , 16 Land, improved 16 unimproved 16 Live stock, number of — estimated 192 value of 17 Manufactures, home-made, value of 17 Market garden products, value of 16 Molasses, sorghum ; 17 Oats 17 Orchard products, value of , 16 Peas and Beans T 17 Potatoes, Irish, and sweet 17 Eye ; 17 Sheep 16 Slaveholders, number of 225 Slaves, number of 225 Swine , 17 Tobacco 17 Wheat 17 Wine 16 Wool 17 INDEX. 261 PAGE. FLORIDA: Animals slaughtered 21 Asses and mules 18 Barley 20 Beeswax 21 Butter 20 Cattle : cows, milcb 18 oxen, working Ig other cattle 18 Cheese 20 Com 19 Cotton, bales of, ginned 19 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 195 cash value of 18 number of, 1850-60 222 Farming implements, in use, value of , 18 Hay 20 Hemp, other, prepared SI Honey , 21 Horses , ^ 18 Land, improved ^ , 18 unimproved 18 Live stock, number of — estimated 192 value of 19 Manufactures, home-made, value of 21 Market garden products, value of 20 Molasses, cane 21 Oats 19 Orchard products, value of 20 Peas and beans 19 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 19 Rice .... 19 Rye 19 Sheep 18 Slaveholders, number of 225 Slaves, number of 225 Sugar, cane 21 Swine 19 Tobacco 19 Wheat 19 Wine 20 Wool 19 GEORGIA: Animals slaughtered „^„ 29 Asses and mules - 26 Barley 28 Beeswax , 29 Buckwheat ^ 28 Butter 28 Cattle : cows, milch 26 oxen, working 26 other cattle., 26 Cheese 28 Clover-seed 28 Corn 27 Cotton, bales of, ginned 27 Counties, number of 222 262 INDEX. GEOF "a- 1 A— Continued: page. Farms, ttree acres and over, number of 196 casli value of 26 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements in use, value of 26 Flax 29 Flax-seed 29 Grass-seeds 28 Hay 28 Hemp, tons of : dew-rotted - 29 other prepared 29 Honey 29 Hops - 28 Horses , 26 Land, improved 26 unimproved 26 Live stock, number of — estimated - 192 value of 27 Manufactures, home-made, value of 29 Market garden products, value of 28 Molasses, cane 29 maple 29 sorghum 29 Oats 27 Orchard products, value of 28 Peas and beans „ 27 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 27 Eice 27 Rye 27 Sheep 26 Silk cocoons 29 Slavehplders, number of 226, 227 Slaves, number of 226, 227 Sugar, cane 29 maple ^ 29 Swine 27 Tobacco 27 Wheat 27 Wine 28 Wool 27 ILLINOIS: Animals slaughtered 37 Asses and mules 34 Barley 36 Beeswax 37 Buckwheat 36 Butter 36 Cattle : cows, milch 34 oxen, working 34 other cattle 34 Cheese 36 Clover-seed 36 Com 35 Cotton, bales of, ginned 35 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of I97 cash value of 34 INDEX. 263 ILLINOIS— Continued: Farms, number of, 1850-'60 _ ^2°2^2 Farming implements in use, value of 34 Flax " ' g^ Flax-seed • -- Grass-seeds o^ 3d ^^y 36 Hemp, tons of: dew-rotted ■_ 3^ water-rotted gy other prepared oy Honey 07 Hops : !!!"!!.!!"! se Horses 34 Land, improved 30 unimproved 30 Live stock, number of — estimated ] 92 value of 35 Manufactures, home-made, value of 37 Market garden products, value of 36 Molasses, maple 37 sorghum 37 Oats 0/5 Orchard products, value of 36 Peas and beans , • 35 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 35 Rye - 35 Sheep 34 Silk cocoons 37 Sugar, maple 37 Swine 35 Tobacco 35 Wheat 35 Wine 36 Wool '35 INDIANA: Animals slaughtered 45 Asses and mules 42 Barley 44 Beeswax 45 Buckwheat. 44 Butter 44 Cattle: cows, milch 42 oxen, working 42 other cattle 42 Cheese 44 Clover-seed 44 Com 43 Counties, number of 222- Farms, three acres and over, number of 198 cash value of 42 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements in use, value of " 42 Flax 45 Flax-seed - 45 Grass-seeds 44 Hay 44 2{3-l INDEX. TN DIANA — Cniitiuued : rAor. Ileinp, tons of: (lew-rotted 'l-'3 water-rotted i'l other prepared 4) Honey 45 Hops 44 Horses 42 Land, improved 432 unimproved 432 Live stock, number of — estimated 192 value of 43 Manufactures, home-made, value of 45 Market garden products, value of 44 Molasses, maple , 45 sorghum 45 Oats 43 Orchard products, value of 44 Peas and beans 43 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 43 Eye 43 Sheep 42 Silk cocoons 45 Sugar, maple 45 Swine 43 Tobacco 43 Wheat 43 Wine 44 Wool 43 IOWA: Animals slaughtered 53 Asses and mules 60 Barley 52 Beeswax 53 Buckwheat .^ 52 Butter 52 Cattle : cows, milch 50 oxen, working 50 other cattle 50 Cheese 52 Clover-seed - . 52 Corn 51 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 1 199 cash value of 50 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements in use, value of 60 Flax 53 Flax-seed 53 Grass-seeds 52 Hay 52 Hemp, tons of: dew-rotted 53 water-rotted 53 other prepared 53 Honey 53 Hops 52 Horses 50 Laud, improved 50 INDEX. 265 IOWA— Oantinued: Liand, unimproved k^ Live stock, number of, estimated i oo value of ff. Manufactures, home-made, value of co Market garden products, value of co Molasses, maple co sorghum co Oats g. Orchard products, value of 52 Peas and beans g ^ Potatoes, Irish and sweet 5^ %e .......'. 51 Steep 50 Silk cocoons ^ 53 Sugar, maple 53 Swine , 51 Tobacco 51 Wheat 51 Wine 52 Wool '. ■ 51 KANSAS: Animals slaughtered 57 Asses and mules 54 Barley 56 Beeswax 57 Buckwheat 56 Butter 56 Cattle : cows, milch 54 oxen, working 54 other cattle 54 Cheese 56 Clover-seed 56 Com 55 Cotton, bales of ginned 55 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 200 cash value of. 54 number of, 1850-60 222 Fanning implements in use, value of - 54 Flax 57 Flax-seed 57 Grrass-seeds - 56 Hay 56 Hemp, dew-rotted 57 Honey 67 Hops 56 Horses 54 Land, improved 54 unimproved 54 Live stock, number of, estimated 192 value of 55 Manufactures, home-made, value of 57 Market garden products, value of 56, Molasses, maple 5'? sorghum 57 Oats 54 Orchard products, value of 56 34 266 INDEX. K A N S A S — Continued : p a o e . Peas and beans 55 Potatoes, Irisli and sweet 55 Eye 55 Sheep 54 Silk cocoons 57 Slaveholders, number of 227 Slaves, number of 227 Sugar, maple 57 Swine 55 Tobacco i 55 Wheat 55 Wine 56 Wool 55 KENTUCKY: Animals slaughtered 65 Asses and mules 62 Barley 64 Beeswax 65 Buckwheat 64 Butter '. 64 Cattle : cows, milch 62 oxen, working 62 other cattle 62 Cheese 64 Clover-seed 64 Corn 63 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 201 cash value of 62 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements in use, value of 62 Flax 65 Flax-seed 65 Grass-seeds 64 Hay 64 Hemp, tons of: dew-rotted 65 water-rotted 65 other prepared 65 Honey 65 Hops 64 Horses 62 Land, improved 62 unimproved 62 Live stock, number of, estimated X92 value of 63 Manufactures, home-made, value of 65 Market garden products, value of 64 Molasses, maple 65 sorghum 65 Oats 63 Orchard products, value of 64 Peas and beans 63 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 63 Rice %e 63 Sheep Q2 INDEX. 267 KENTUCKY— Continued: page. Silk cocoons . . . , 65 Slaveholders, number of 228, 229 Slaves, number of 228, 225 Sugar, maple j 65 Swine 63 Tobacco 63 Wheat 63 Wine 64 Wool 63 LOUISIANA: Animals slaughtered 69 Asses and mules 66 Barley 68 Beeswax 69 Buckwheat 68 Butter 68 Cattle : cows, milch 66 oxen, working 66 other cattle 66 Cheese :. . 68 Clover-seed — 68 Corn 67 Cotton, bales of ginned 67 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 202 cash value of 66 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements in use, value of 66 Grass-seeds 68 Hay 68 Hemp, dew-rotted 1 69 Honey '. : 69 Hops 68 Horses 66 Land, improved 66 unimproved - 66 Live stock, number of, estimated 192 value of 67 Manufactures, home-made, value of 69 Market garden products, value of 68 Molasses, cane 69 Oats 67 Orchard products, value of 68 Peas and beans , 67 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 67 Eiee 67 Eye ^ 67 Sheep 66 Slaveholders, number of 230 Slaves, number of 230 Sugar, cane 69 Swine 67 Tobacco 67 Wheat 67 Wine - 6 Wool - 67 268 INDEX. MAINE: PAOE. Animals slaughtered 71 Asses and mules 70 Barley 70 Beeswax 71 Buckwheat 70 Butter 70 Cattle: cows, milch 70 oxen, working 70 other cattle 70 Cheese 70 Clover-seed 70 Com 71 Counties, number of ,; 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 203 cash value of 70 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements in use, value of 70 Flax 71 Flax-seed 71 Grass-seeds , 70 Hay 70 Hemp, other prepared 71 Honey 71 Hops 70 Horses 70 Land, improved 70 unimpiroved 70 Live stock, number of — estimated 192 < value of 71 Manufactures, home-made, value of 71 Market garden products, value of 70 Molasses, maple 71 Oats 71 Orchard products, value of 70 Peas and beans 71 Potatoes, Irish and sweet ^ 71 Eye 71 Sheep 70 Silk cocoons 71 Sugar, maple 71 Swine 71 Tobacco 71 Wheat , 71 Wine 71 Wool 71 MARYLAND: Animals slaughtered , 73 Asses and mules 72 Barley 72 Beeswax 73 Buckwheat 72 Butter 72 Cattle : cows, milch 72 oxen, working 72 other cattle 72 Cheese 72 INDEX. 269 MARYLAND— Continued: p^o^, Clover-seed 72 Com 73 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 203 cash value of 72 number of, 1850-60 222 Farming implements in use, value of 72 Flax 73 Flax-seed 73 Grass-seeds 72 Hay 72 Hemp, dew-rotted 73 other prepared 73 Honey 73 Hops 72 Horses , 72 Land, improved 72 unimproved 72 Live stock, number of — estimated , 192 value of 73 Manufactures, home-made, value of 73 Market garden products, value of 72 Molasses, maple 73 sorghum 73 Oats 73 Orchard products, value of 72 Peas and beans 73 Potatoes, Irish and sweet '. 73 Rye 73 Sheep 73 SUk cocoons . 73 Slaveholders, number of 231 Slaves, number of 231 Sugar, maple 73 Swine 73 Tobacco 73 Wheat 73 Wine 72 Wool 73 MASSACHUSETTS: Animals slaughtered 75 Asses and mules 74 Barley 74 Beeswax 75 Buckwheat • ■ . 74 Butter 74 Cattle : cows, milch 74 oxen, working 74 other cattle 74 Cheese 74 Clover-seed 74 Corn ■ 75 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 202 cash value of '■ 74 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements, in use, value of 74 Flax 75 270. INDEX. MASSACHUSETTS— Continued: paoe. Flax-seed 75 Grass-seeds 74 Hay 14 Honey 75 Hops 74 Horses 74 Land, improved 74 unimproved 74 Live stock, number of — estimated 192 value of 75 Manufactures, home-made, value of 75 Market garden products, value of , . . . , 74 Molasses, maple 74 Oats 75 Orchard products, value of 74 Peas and beans 75 Potatoes, Irish and sweet , . 75 Eye 75 Sheep 74 Sugar, maple 75 Swine 75 Tobacco 75 Wheat 75 Wine 75 Wool 75 MICHIGAN: Animals slaughtered 79 Asses and mules 76 Barley 78 Beeswax 79 Buckwheat 78 Butter 78 Cattle : cows, mUch 76 oxen, working 76 other cattle 76 Cheese 78 Clover-seed ■■ 78 Com 77 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 204 cash value of 76 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements in use, value of 76 Fla!x 79 Flax-seed - 79 Grass-seed 78 Hay 78 Hemp, dew-rotted 76 other prepared 79 Honey 79 Hops 78 Horses 76 Land, improved 76 unimproved 76 Live stock, number of — estimated : value of 77 Manufactures, homemade, value of 79 INDEX. 271 MICHIGAN— Continued: p^oj:. Market garden products, value of ^ 78 Molasses, maple 79 sorghum 79 Oats 77 Orchard products, value of 78 Peas and beans 77 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 77 Kice 77 Rye 77 Sheep 76 Silk cocoons 79 Sugar maple 79 Swine 77 Tobacco 77 Wheat 77 ISVine - : 78 Wool 77 MINNESOTA: Animals slaughtered 83 Asses and mules 80 Barley 82 Beeswax 83 Buckwheat 82 Butter 82 Cattle : cows, milch 80 oxen, working SO other cattle 80 Cheese 82 Clover-seed 82 Com 81 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 205 cash value of 80 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements in use, value of 80 Flax 83 Flax-seed .- - - 83 Grass-seeds - 82 Hay 82 Hemp, other prepared 83 Honey - 83 Hops 82 . Horses 80 Land, improved -' - - 80 unimproved 80 Live stock, number of, estimated 192 value of 81 Manufactures, home-made, value of 83 Market garden products, value of v 82 Molasses, maple 83 sorghum 83 Oats : 81 Orchard products, value of - - - 82 Peas and beans - 81 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 81 Rice : - ■ - ■ - : ■ - - • ■•.-.-• 81 Eye 81 272 INDEX. MINNESOTA— Oontinued: paok Sheep 80 Silk cocoons 83 Sugar, maple .'. 83 Swine 81 Tobacco , 81 Wheat 81 Wine 82 Wool 81 MISSISSIPPI: Animals slaughtered 87 Asses and mules 84 Barley 86 Beeswax. 87 Buckwheat 86 Butter 86 Cattle: cows, milch • 84 oxen, working 84 other cattle 84 Cheese 86 Clover-seed 86 Corn 85 Cotton, bales of, ginned 85 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 206 cash value of 84 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements in use, value of 84 Flax 87 Flax-seed 87 Grass-seeds 86 Hay 86 Honey 87 Hops 86 Horses 84 Land, improved 8 4 unimproved 84 Liveustock, number of, estimated , 192 value of 85 Manufactures, home-made, value of * 87 Market garden products, value of 86 Molasses, cane 87 sorghum 87 Oats 85 Orchard products, value of 86 Peas and beans 85 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 85 Eice 85 Bye , 85 Sheep 84 Bilk cocoons 87 Slaveholders, number of 232 Slaves, number of 232 Sugar, cane 87 maple 87 Swine 85 Tobacco 85 INDEX. ■ 273 Mississippi—Continued: Wheat _ g5 "Wine. "Wool. Cheese. PAGE. 86 85 MISSOURI: Animals slaughtered 95 Asses and mules 92 94 95 Barley. Beeswax . Buckwheat 94 Butter 92 Cattle : cows, milch ; 92 oxen, working 92 other cattle 92 94 Clover-seed ' 94 Com 93 Cotton, bales of, ginned 93 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 207 cash value of 92 number of, 1850-60. 222 Fanning implements in use, value of 92 Flax 95 Flax-seed 95 Grass-seeds 94 Hay 94 Hemp, tons of 95 dew-rotted 95 water-rotted 95 other prepared 95 Honey • 95 Hops 94 Horses , 92 Land, improved 92 unimproved 92 Live stock, nUtober of, estimated 192 value of 93 Manufactures, home-made, value of 95 Market garden products, value of 94 Molasses, cane 95 maple ^. 95 sorghum 95 Oats - 93 Orchard products, value of 94 Peas and beans 93 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 93 Rice 93 Eye. 93 Sheep - 92 Silk cocoons 95 Slaveholders, number of .• 233, 234 Slaves, number of 233, 234 Sugar, cane 95 maple 95 Swine 93 Tobacco. . . . . 93 ■ 35 - 274 INDEX. M I S S U R I— Continued : page. Wheat 93 Wine 94 Wool 93 NEW HAMPSHIRE: Animals slaughtered 97 Asses and mules 96 Barley 96 Beeswax .- 97 Buckwheat 96 Butter 96 Cattle : cows, milch 96 oxen, working 96 other cattle 96 Cheese 96 Clover-seed 96 Corn 97 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 208 cash value of 96 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements in use, value of 96 Flax 97 Flax-seed - 97 Grass-seeds 96 Hay 96 Hemp : dew-rotted 97 water-rotted 97 other prepared 97 Honey 97 Hops 96 Horses 96 Land, improved 96 unimproved 96 Live stock, number of, estimated 192 value of 97 Manufactures, home-made, value of 97 Market garden products, value of 96 Molasses, maple 97 Oats 97 Orchard products, value of 96 Peas and beans 97 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 97 Rye 97 Sheep 96 SUk cocoons • 97 Sugar, maple 97 Swine 97 Tobacco 97 Wheat 97 Wine - -, 96 Wool 97 NEW JERSEY: Animals slaughtered 99 Asses and mules 98 Barley 98 INDEX. 275 NEW JERSEY— Continued; page. Beeswax 99 Buckwheat 98 Butter 98 Cattle : cows, milch 98 oxen, working 98 other cattle 98 Cheese 98 Clover-seed 98 Com 99 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of , . . 208 cash value of 98 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements in use, value of 98 Flax 99 Flax-seed 99 Grass-seeds 98 Hay 98 Hemp : dew-rotted 99 other prepared - 99 Honey 99 Hops . - 98 Horses 98 Land, improved 98 unimproved 98 Live stock, number of, estimated 192 value of 99 Manufactures, home-made, value of '. 99 Market garden products, value of 98 Molasses, maple 99 sorghum 99 Oats 99 Orchard products, value of 98 Peas and beans 99 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 99 Bye 99 Sheep 98 Sugar, maple 99 Swine 99 Tobacco 99 Wheat 99 Wine 98 Wool 99 NEW YORK: Animals slaughtered 103 Asses and mules 100 Barley 102 Beeswax 103 Buckwheat 102 Butter 102 Cattle: cows, milch 100 oxen, working 100 other cattle 100 Cheese 102 Clover-seed 102 Corn 101 276 INDEX. NEW YORK— Continued: page. Counties, numter of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 209 cash value of 100 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements in use, value of 100 Flax ^ 103 Flax-seed 103 Grass-seeds ^ 102 Hay 102 Hemp: dew-rotted 103 water-rotted 103 other prepared - 103 Honey ■--. 103 Hops -. ... ^ . ^ 102 Horses 100 Land, improved 100 unimproved 100 Live stock, number of, estimated 192 value of 1011 Manufactures, home-made, value of. 103 Market garden products, value of , 102 Molasses, maple 103 sorghum 103 Oats 101 Orchard products, value of 102 Peas and beans -. 101 Potatoes, Irish, and sweet 101 Rye 101 Sheep 100 Silk cocoons 103 Sugar, maple 103 Swine 101 Tobacco 101 Wheat 101 Wine 102 Wool 101 NORTH CAROLINA: Animals slaughtered Ill Asses and mules 108 Barley 110 Beeswax. Ill Buckwheat 110 Butter 110 Cattle: cows, milch 108 oxen, working 108 other cattle 108 Cheese 110 Clover-seed 110 Corn 109 Cotton, bales of, giuned 109 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of : 210 cash value of 108 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements in use, value of 108 Flax r Ill INDEX. 277 NORTH CAROLINA— Continued: paoe. Flax-seed ; Ill Grass-seeds 110 Hay 110 Hemp, other prepared Ill Honey Ill Hops 110 Horses 108 Land, improved 108 unimproved 108 Live stock,, number of, estimated 192 value of 109 Manufactures, home-made, value of Ill Market garden products, value of 110 Molasses, cane Ill maple Ill sorghum. ■ Ill Oats - 109 Orchard products, value of , 110 Peas and beans 109 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 109 Rice 109 Rye - 109 Sheep - - 108 Silk cocoons - Ill Slaveholders, number of 235, 236 Slaves, number of 235, 236 Sugar, cane - i Ill maple Ill Swine - 109 Tobacco - 109 Wheat - 109 Wine 110 Wool , : 109 OHIO: Animals slaughtered 119 Asses and mules 116 Barley 118 Beeswax 119 Buckwheat 118 Butter 118 Cattle : cows, milch 116 oxen, working 116 other cattle 116 Cheese . - 118 Clover-seed 118 Com 117 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 2] 1 cash value of 116 number of, 1850-'60 1 . . 222 Farming implements in use, value of 116 Flax 119 Flax-seed 119 Grass-seeds 118 Hay - 118 Hemp : dew-rotted 119 278 INDEX. H 1 — Gontinued : taoe. Hemp, water-rotted 119 other prepared 119 Honey 119 Hops 118 Horses 116 Land, improved 116 unimproved 116 Live stock, number of, estimated 192 value of 117 Manufactures, home-made, vahie of 119 Market garden products, value of 118 Molasses, maple 119 sorghum , ] 19 Oats 117 Orchard products, value of 118 Peas and beans 117 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 117 Rye 117 Sheep 116 Silk cocoons 119 Sugar, maple 119 Swine 117 Tobacco 117 Wheat 117 Wine 118 Wool 117 OREGON: Animals slaughtered 121 Asses and mules 120 Barley 1^0 Beeswax 121 Buckwheat 120 Butter 120 Cattle : cows, milch 120 oxen, working 120 other cattle 120 Cheese 120 Clover-seed 120 Corn 121 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 212 cash value of 120 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements in use, value of 120 Flax 121 Flax-seed 121 Grass-seeds 120 Hay 120 Hemp, dew-rotted 121 Honey 121 Hops 120 Horses 120 Land, improved 1-20 unimproved 120 Live stock, number of, estimated - 192 value of 121 Manufactures, bome-made, value of 121 INDEX. 279 O E E G O N— Continued : p , „^ Market garden products, value of 120 Molasses, sorglmm 121 Oats 121 Orchard products, value of 120 Peas and beans 121 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 121 %e 121 Sheep 120 Swine 121 Tobacco 121 Wheat 121 Wine 120 Wool 121 PENNSYLVANIA: Animals slaughtered 125 Asses and mules 122 Barley 124 Beeswax , 125 Buckwheat ^ 124 Butter 124 Cattle: cows, milch 122 oxen, working 122 other cattle 122 Cheese 124 Clover-seed 124 Corn , 123 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 213 cash value of 122 number of, 1860-'60 222 Tanning implements in use, value of 4 122 Flax 125 Flax-seed 125 Grass-seeds 125 Hay 124 Hemp, dew-rotted 125 water-rotted 125 other prepared 125 Honey 125 Hops 124 Horses 122 Land, improved 122 unimproved 122 Live stock, number of, estimated 192 value of 123 Manufactures, home-made, value of 125 Market garden products, value of 124 Molasses, maple 125 sorghum 125 Oats 123 Orchard products, value of 124 Peas and beans 123 Potatoes, Irish and sw«et 123 Eye '. 123 Sheep 122 Silk cocoons 125 Sugar, maple 125 280 INDEX. PENNSYLVANIA— Oontinned: page. Swine , 123 Tobacco 123 Wheat 123 Wine 124 Wool 123 EHODE ISLAND: Animals slaughtered .- 127 Asses and mules 126 Bailey 126 Beeswax 127 Buckwheat 126 Butter 126 Cattle : cows, milch 126 oxen, working 126 other cattle 126 Cheese 126 Clover-seed 126 Corn ■ , .. , , 127 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 212 cash value of 126 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements, in use, value of 126 Grass-seeds 126 Hay , 126 Honey .....,.,.., 127 Hops , , . , 126 Horses , , . 126 Land, improved , , , , , 126 unimproved , . . , 126 Live stock, number of — estimated , , . . . , 192 value of 127 Manufactures, home-made, value of 127 Market garden products, value of , , , . . . , 126 Molasses, sorghum , , . , . , 127 Oats , , 127 Orchard products, value of , , 126 Peas and beans 127 Potatoes, Irish and sweet .' 127 Eye 127 Sheep 126 Swiae , 127 Tobacco , , 127 Wheat , , 127 Wine , , . , , , 126 Wool 127 SOUTH CAROLINA: Animals slaughtered 131 Asses and mules 128 Barley 130 Beeswax 131 Buckwheat 130 Butter - 130 Cattle : cows, milch 128 oxen, working ■ 128 other cattle 128 INDEX. 281 5 0UTH CAROLINA— Continued: page. Cheese 130 Clover-seed 130 Corn 129 Cotton, bales of, ginned 129 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of ...... , 214 cash value of , . . , , 128 number of, 1850-'60 .' 222 Farming implements, in use, value of 128 Flax 131 Flax-seed 131 G-rass-seeds ,. 130 Hay 130 Hemp, dew-rotted 131 Honey 131 Hops 130 Horses 128 Land, improved 128 unimproved 128 Live stpck, number of — estimated 192 value of 129 Manufactures, home-made, value of 131 Market garden products, value of 130 Molasses, cane - 131 sorghum 131 OatB 129 Orchard products, value of . . 130 Peas and beans 129 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 129 Rice 129 Rye 129 Sheep 128 Silk cocoons 13 L Slaveholders, number of 237 Slaves, number of ' 237 Sugar, cane 131 maple 13l Swine 129 Tobacco 129 Wheat 129 Wine 130 Wool 129 TENNESSEE: Animals slaughtered 139 Asses and mules 136 Barley 138 Beeswax 139 Buckwheat 138 Butter 138 Cattle : cows, milch , 136 oxen, working 136 other cattle 136 Cheese 138 Clover-seed 138 Com 137 Cotton, bales of, ginned 137 36 282 INDEX. T E N N E S E S E— Continued ; p^oe. Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 21,') cash value of 136 number of, 1850-60 222 Farming implements, in use, value of 136 Flax 139 Flax-seed 139 Grass-seeds 138 Hay 138 Hemp, tons of: dew-rotted 139 other prepared 139 Honey 139 Hops 138 Horses 136 Land, improved 136 unimproved : 136 Live stock, number of — estimated 192 value of 137 Manufactures, home-made, value of 139 Market garden products, value of 138 Molasses, cane 139 maple 139 sorghum 139 Oats 137 Orchard products, value of 138 Peas and beans 137 Potatoes, Lisb and sweet 137 Rice 137 Eye. 137 Sheep 136 Slaveholders, number of 238, 239 Slaves, number of '. 238, 239 Sugar, cane, pounds of 139 maple 139 Swine 137 Tobacco 137 Wheat 137 Wine ] 38 Wool 137 TEXAS: Animals slaughtered 151 Asses and mules 148 Barley 150 Beeswax 151 Buckwheat » 150 Butter 150 Cattle: cows, milch 148 oxen, working 24g other cattle 148 Cheese 150 Clover-seed 150 Corn 149 Cotton, bales of, ginned I49 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 216 217 cash value of 148 I:B}'DEX. 283 T E X A S— Continued : ^ ^ ^ ^. Farms, number of 1850-'60 222 Farming implements, in use, value of 148 Flax 151 Grass-seeds 150 Hay 150 Hemp : dew-rotted 151 water-prepared 151 Honey 151 Hops 150 Horses 148 Land, improved , 148 unimproved 148 Live stock, number of — estimated 192 value of 149 Manufactures, home-made, value of 151 Market garden products, value of 150 Molasses, cane 151 sorghum 151 Oats 149 Orchard products, value of ' 150 Peas and beans 149 Potatoes, Irish an^ sweet 149 Rice 1 49 Rye 149 Sheep 148 Silk cocoons 151 Slaveholders, number of 240, 242 Slaves, number of 240, 242 Sugar, cane 151 Swine 149 Tobacco 149 Wheat 149 Wine 150 Wool 149 VERMONT: Animals slaughtered 153 Asses and mules 152 Barley 152 Beeswax 153 Buckwheat 152 Butter 152 Cattle : cows, milch 152 oxen, working 152 other cattle 152 Cheese. 152 Clover-seed 152 Corn 153 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 217 cash value of 1 52 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements, in use, value of 152 Flax 15 3 Flax-seed 153 Grass-seeds 152 Hay 152 284 INDEX. VERMONT— Continued: page. Honey l''>3 Hops 1 52 Horses - 152 Land, improved , 152 unimproved. , 152 Live stock, number of — estimated 192 value of 153 Manufactures, home-made, value of 153 Market garden products, value of 152 Molasses, maple 153 Oats ........ , . , 153 Orchard products, value of 152 Peas and beans 153 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 153 Rye 153 Sheep 152 Sugar, maple , 153 Swine 153 Tobacco 153 Wheat 153 Wine 152 Wool 153 VIRGINIA: Animals slaughtered 165 Asses and mules 162 Barley 164 Beeswax 165 Buckwheat 164 Butter 164 Cattle : cows, milch 162 oxen, working , 162 other cattle 162 Cheese 164 Clover-seed 164 Com 163 Cotton, bales of, ginned , 163 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 218, 219 cash value of 162 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements, in use, value of 162 Flax , 165 Flax-seed 165 Grass-seeds 164 Hay 164 Hemp, pounds of; dew-rotted 165 water-rotted 165 other prepared 165 Honey 165 Hops 164 Horses 162 Land, improved 162 unimproved 162 Live Slock, number of — estimated 192 value of -. 163 Manufactures, home-made, value of 165 INDEX. 285 V IE G INI A— Continued: page. Market garden products, value of 164 Molasses, maple .%.... 165 sorghum 7 165 Oats 163 Orchard products, value of. 164 Peas and beans 163 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 163 Rice 163 Rye..., , 163 Sheep , 162 Silk cocoons ^ 165 Slaveholders, number of 243, 245 Slaves, number of 243, 245 Sugar, maple 165 Swine 163 Tobacco 163 Wheat 163 Wine : 164 Wool 163 WISCONSIN: Animals slaughtered - 169 Asses and mules 166 Barley 168 Beeswax .V..' 169 Buckwheat 168 Butter 168 Cattle : cows, milch 166 oxen, working 166 other cattle 166 Cheese 168 Clover-seed 168 Com 167 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of. 219 cash value of 166 number of, 18o0-'60 222 Farming implements, in use, value of 166 Flax ^ 169 Flax-seed 169 Grass-seeds 168 Hay - 168 Hemp, dew-rotted 169 water-rotted 169 other prepared 169 Honey 169 Hops 168 Horses 166 Land, improved 166 unimproved 166 Live stock, number of, estimated 192 value of 167 Manufactures, home-made, value of Igg Market garden products, value of Igg Molasses, maple 169 sorghum 169 Oats 167 Orchard products, value of 168 286 INDEX. WISCONSIN— CoBtinued: page. Peas and beans 167 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 167 ^ ' fiye 167 Sheep: 166 Silk cocoons 169 Sugar, maple 169 Swine 167 Tobacco 167 Wheat 167 Wine 168 Wool 167 COLUMBIA, DISTRICT OT: Animals slaughtered 171 Asses and mules - 171 Barley 171 Beeswax 171 Buckwheat 171 ButteV 171 Cattle : cows, milch 171 oxen, working 171 other cattle 171 Corn 171 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 220 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements, in use, value of 171 Hay = 171 Honey 171 Hops 171 Horses 171 Land, improved 171 unimproved 171 Live stock, number of — estimated , 192 value of 171 M'inufactures, home-made, value of 171 Market garden products, value of 171 Oats 171 Orchard products, value of ^ 171 Peas and beans 171 Potatoes, Irish and sweet ~ 171 Eye , 171 Sheep 171 '-,f ' Slaveholders, number of 246 Slaves, number of 246 Swine 171 Tobacco 171 Wheat 171 Wine 171 Wool 171 DAKOTA: Animals slaughtered 170 Asses and mules 170 Buckwheat 170 Butter 170 Cattle: cows, milch 170 oxen, working ^ 170 other cattle 170 INDEX. 287 DAKOTA— Continued: page. Clover-seed - 170 Com 170 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 220 cash value of 170 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements, in use, value of 170 Hay 170 Horses 170 Land, improved 170 unimproved 170 Live stock, number of — estimated 192 value of - 170 Molasses, sorghum 170 Oats 170 Peas and beans 170 Potatoes, Irish 170 Rye 170 Sheep. 170 Swine 170 Tobacco 170 Wheat 170 NEBRASKA: Animals slaughtered 175 Asses and mules 172 Barley 174 Beeswax ^ 175 Buckwheat 174 Butter 174 Cattle : cows, milch 172 oxen, working 172 other cattle 172 Cheese i 174 Clover-seed 174 Com 173 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 220 cash value of 1 72 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements, in use, value of 172 Flax-seed 175 Grass-seeds 174 Hay ^ 174 Hemp: dew-rotted 175 water-rotted 175 Honey 175 Hops 174 Horses 172 Land, improved 172 unimproved 172 Live stock, number of — estimated 192 value of 173 Manufactures, home-made, value of 175 Market garden products, value of 174 Molasses, maple 175 sorghum 175 288 IN HE XI IfE BR ASK A— Continued: taoe. Oats 173 Orchard products, value of 174 Peas and beans 173 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 173 Rye 173 Sheep 172 Silk cocoons 175 Slaveholders, number of 246 Slaves, number of 246 Sugar, maple 175 Swine 173 Tobacco 173 Wheat 173 Wine 174 Wool 173 NEVADA: Animals slaughtered 177 Asses and mules 176 Barley 176 Butter 176 Cattle : cows, milch 176 oxen, working 176 other cattle 176 Com 177 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 220 cash value of : 176 number of, 1850-'60 222 Farming implements, in use; value of 176 Hay 176 Horses 176 Land, improved ]76 unimproved 176 Live stock, number of — estimated 192 value of ^. 177 •Manufactures, home-made, value of ^ 177 Market garden products, value of 176 Oats ] 77 Peas and beans 177 Potatoes, Irish and sweet 177 Rye 177 Sheep 176 Swine. , . 177 Wheat 177 Wool , 177 NEW MEXICO: Animals slaughtered .■. 179 Asses and mules ............'..... 178 Barley 178 Buckwheat -. 178 Butter 178 Cattle : cows, milch 178 oxen, working 178 other cattle 178 Cheese 178 Com 179 IKDEX. 289 NEW MEXICO— Continued: faoj;. Cotton, bales of, ginned 179 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of 220 cash value of 178 number of, 1850-'60 232 Farming implements, in use, value of 178 Hay . 178 Horses 178 Land, improved 1 78 unimproved 178 Live stock, number of — estimated 192 value of 179 Manufactures, home-made, value of 179 Market garden products, value of 178 Molasses, sorghum 179 Oats ; ; 179 Orchard products, value of 178 Peas and beans 179 Potatoes, Irish and sweet J 79 Rye 179 Sheep 17S Swine - 179 Tobacco - 179 Wheat 179 Wine .....;.::.::.. 178 Wool ...:.V......... ..- -.' 179 UTAH: Animals slanglitfii'ed •-, - 181 Asses and jnul.es -. — , - -. ----,■,-. 180 Barley 180 Buckwheat , ■.,■•• - -. ,--■•' 180 Butter 180 Cattle: . . cows, milch - - - : 180 oxen, working — - 180 other cattle— 180 Cheese 180 Clover-seed -- - - 180 Com - 181 Cotton, bales of, ginned 181 Counties^ number. of . ...-..,. 222 Farms, three acres, and over, number of 220 Farms, cashy^ue of. , - 180 Farms, number of-r^l850^'60 222 Farming implements in use, va,lue of 180 Flax 181 Flax-seed 181 Grass-seeds 180 Hay. ---■ ISO Hemp, water-rotted -• 181 Hops 1 80 Horses 180 Land, improved ISO unimproved 180 Live stock, number of^ — estimated; - 192 value of - 18i Manufactures, home-made, value of 181 Market garden products, value of 180 INDEX. II — Continued : pagk. Molasses, maple — - .- - • — 181 sorghum ISl Oats -..:■. -: 181 Orchard products, value of ■- - - — ■ — 180 Peas and beans 181 Potatoes, Irish 181 Eye 181 Sheep , ISO Slaveholders, number of 24G Slaves, number of 246 Swine 181 Wheat 181 Wine 180 Wool 181 HINGTON: Animals slaughtered 183 Asses and mules 182 Barley 182 Beeswax 183 Buckwheat 182 Butter 182 Cattle : cows, milch 182 oxen, working 182 other cattle ■ , 182 Cheese 182 Clover-seed 182 Counties, number of 222 Farms, three acres and over, number of - 220 cash value of .• 182 number of, 1850-60 -. 222 Farming implements, in use, value of 182 Flax-seed 183 Grass-seeds 1 82 Hay 182 Honey - 183 Hops 182 Horses 182 Land, improved 182 unimproved r82 INDEX. 291 UNITED STATES: RECAPITULATION, &c., Of state tahhs of agriculture ; farms containing three acres and more; slaveholders and slaves; farms, number of, 1850-60; also, number of counties, 1860; average number of acres to farms, 1850-60. ^ Animals Slaughtered : 1860 1850 Asses and Mcles : 1860 1850 Barley: bushels of, 1860 bushels of, 1850 Beeswax : pounds of, 1860 Beeswax and Honey : pounds of, 1850 Buckwheat : bushels of, 1860 bushels of, 1850 Butter : pounds of, 1860 pounds of, 1850 Cattle, 1860 : cows, milch oxen, -working --- other cattle Cattle, 1850 : cows, milch oxen, working other cattle i Cheese ; I pounds of, 1860 . . pounds of, 1850 . . CliOVBR-SEED : bushels of, 1860 . . bushels of, 1850. Corn, Indian : bushels of, 1860 . bushels of, 1850. Cotton, Ginned : bales of, 1860... bales of, 1850 . . Counties: ' number of, 1860 Farms : three acres and more, number of, 1860 - cash value of, 1860 cash value of, 1850 number of, 1850-'60 average number of acres to, 1850-'60 . Farming Implements, in use: value of, 1860 value of, 1850 Flax: pounds of, 1860 AGE. Flax — Continued : 187 pounds of, 1850 191 Flax-seed : bushels of, 1860. bushels of, 1850. Grass-seeds: 184 188 bushels of, 1860. 186 bushels of, 1850 190 187 191 186 190 186 190 184 184 184 188 188 188 186 190 186 190 185 189 185 189 222 221 184 188 222 222 184 188 187 Hay: tons of, 1860 tons of, 1850 . . . . Hemp, tons of, 1860 : dew-rotted water-rotted other prepared — Hemp, tons of, 1850 : dew-rotted water-rotted Ho.xey : pounds of, 1860. . Hops : pounds of, 1860 . pounds of, 1850 . Horses : number of, 1860 number of, 1850 Land, (in farms :) improved, acres of, 1860 — unimproved, acres of, 1860 . Land, (in farms :) improved, acres of, 1850 unimproved, acres of, 1850 Live Stock : number of, estimated, 1860 value of, 1860 value of, 1850 .^Manufactures, (home-made :) value of, 1860 value of, 1860 Market Garden Products : value of, 1860 value of, 1850 Molasses : cane, gallons of, 1860 maple, gallons of, 1860 sorghum, gallons of, 1860. . gallons of, 1850 Oats bushels of, 1860 bushels of, 1850 PA 01!, \l9l 187 191 186 190 186 190 187 187 187 191 191 187 186 190 184 188 184 184 188 188 192 l85 189" 187 191 186 190 187 187 187 191 185 189 292 OncHAUD Products : value of, 1860 value of, 1850 Peas and Beans : bushels of, 1860 bushels of, 1850 Potatoes : M ,/ Irish, bushels of, 1860 . ',S / s-weet, bushels of, 1860 . Irish, bushels of, 1850 . sweet, bushels of, 1850 BiCE: pounds of, 1860 pounds of, 1850 Eye : bushels of, 1860 bushels of, 1850 Sheep : number of, 1860 number of, 1850 Silk Cocoons : pounds of, 1860 pounds of, 1850 INDEX. PAGE. 186 190 185 189 185 185 189 189 185 189 185 189 184 188 187 191 Slaveholders : number of, 1860 number of, 1850 Slaves : number of, 1860 Sugar : cane, hogsheads of, 1860 maple, pounds of, 1860. . cane, hogsheads of, 1850 maple, pounds of, 1850. . Swine : numbei' of, 1860 number of, 1850 Tobacco : pounds of, 1860 pounds of, 1850 Wheat : bushels of, 1860 bushels of, 1850 Wine : gallons of, 1860 gallons of, 1850 Wool: pounds of, 1860 pounds of, 1850 ERRATA. Page 10, milch cows, California, for "905,407," read "205,407." Pages 70 and 186, buckwheat, Maine, for "239,519," read "339,519." Page XVI, agricultural implements, Ohio, for "417.6, read " 405.5." Page XXII, "Manny" reaping and mowing machines, for " 10,500," read ""6,500." Page CXI, horses, Middle States, 1850, for "2.96," read " 6.96."