(Term paper written by Fred ?lanes, senior year University of ttforth Carolina 1940. Bibliography ?omitted due to Lack of space.) By FRED JONES Tobacco was first made known to ?Europeans in 1492 when Columbus ?and his fellow adventurers found it ?in cultivation and use by the Indian ? tribes of the West Indies. However, ? there was little interest in the use ? of the plant before the middle of the ? sixteenth century*. The Virginia ? colonists were undoubtedly acquaint I ed with tobacco before coming to Vir I gir.ia for it had probably been I brought to England in 1565 by Haw I kins. It was growing there as early I as 1570. I The English colonists found it in I use by the Virginia natives, but it | was poor and weak and had a biting taste. The colonists before 1612 at tempted unsuccessfully to grow to bacco in Virginia from seed im ported from Trinidad. John Rolfe, who began, in 1612 to experiment with its growth, was the true initi j ator of the tobacco industry. It is not known where Rolfe obtained his seed from, but according to all re ports. he grew some excellent to bacco. The success-of this new crop soon became apparent. The first shipments large profits which served as a tremendous stimulant to the industry. In 1616, Sir Thomas Dale was forced to make a law that each person plant two acres of corn for himself and for each servant as a condition for the raising of tobacco. The penalty for not obeying was forfeiture of the crop. Argall, upon returning to the colony in May, 1617, found at Jamestown "the market place, and streets, and all other spare places planted with Tobacco." From this time onward, the industry rapid ly expanded because of the - high prices. The crop of 1618 amounted to 20.000 pounds, that of 1622 amounted to 60,000 pounds, and that of 1627 amounted to 500,000 pounds. Two types of regulation of tobacco were prevalent until the dissolution o: the London Company in 1624: the first was intended to control production and regulate quality; the second was concerned mainly with the tobacco trade. However, there is no clear-cut distinction between the two types of regulation as far as the source of regulation is con cerned because most of the early rules arid laws emenated from either the Company or the Crown. The first legislative assembly of Virginia which met in 1619 required ":ha: every planter produce one ex-l :ra barrel of corn, and fo set out six mulbery trees each year for a period of seven years." Provision was made to inspect all tobacco offered for sale and any that did not come up :o specifications was burned in the presence of the owner. In 1621, Governor Francis Wyatt was instructed not to permit a planter to produce more than one hundred pounds of tobacco and to, have them plant great quantities of corn for their own use. Efforts to limit the planting of tobacco were rot successful during the first years the Assembly, however. From '"21 to 1628, the price of tobacco steadily declined chiefly because of the huge crops produced in the col lides. By 1629, charges were so high and the price so low that it was not worth exporting. In 1630, Gov ernor Harvey complained to the Privy "Council "that merchants were buying tobacco for less than one pence a pound; while they were charging twelve shillings a ton for freight to England." -The Governor had previously, 1628, issued a pro clamation requiring that tobacco plants should be set at least four and one-half feet apart, and not more than twelve leaves could be harvest ed from each stalk in order to de crease production and thereby raise prices. The Virginia Assembly passed a law in 1632 which was more restric tive than any previous one. No per son was permitted to set out more than two thousand plants. Only nine leaves were to be gathered from each plant! Each planter was tc get a neighbor to count the tobaccc plants and was then to report the number which he had counted to somt local official. In 1633, the numbei of plants was reduced from twc thousand to fifteen hundred per per son. Tobacco prices were so low tha it took fifty or sixty pounds to par chase a pair of shoes. The planter were almost constantly in debt tt the English merchants who charge* them exorbitant prices for commodi ties sent over from England. As i result, the Virginians mhde man; efforts to control the price of to bacco. In 1633, the Virginia As sembly set the price at nine pence i pound . In 1639, price fixing by lin was attempted again. All creditor were forced to take forty pound of tobacco as payment for each ban dred pounds that was due their These laws seem to have had littt effect since the quanity was no greatly lessened nor was the pric actually increased The quality c the tobacco was greatly improved b the inspection system, however. Th laws stiwriliiit production kept *Ji planters from planting on sob-mai ginal Surds and forced than int The methods used in the roWvi tion of tobacco or/the sources of the seed during the first few years are not known. More than likely, this* was an experimental period. In the early years, the colonists threw the tobacco in piles, covering it with marsh hay and allowed it to sweat. In 1619, a Mr. Lambert introduced the method of curing tobacco by hanging on lines, instead of sun cur ing in piles. No fertilizer was used to aid in the cultivation of this rapidly ex panding crop, and the rich bottom lands of Virginia were soon exhaust ed. As a result, tobacco culture tended towards the rich bottom j lands of North Carolina. Too, the coming of slaves to Virginia drove 1 many of the small planters away. The rich lands and the mild climate was the positive factor which tended to bring Virginia planters to North Carolina. Very few records have been left 1 dealing with the extent of tobacco ' production in North Carolina during the early period of settlement. Most 1 of Albemarle's tobacco went through < the Virginia ports and was sold to the world as "Virginia Brights." However, it is known that. tobacco i culture in North Carolina was firm ly established before 1700. The qual- ; ity and yield of North Carolina to bacco was superior to that grown in 1 Virginia. There were several ob- ? structions to tobacco culture in North Carolina, however. Lack of labor ( and tools kept the first settlers of North Carolina from producing any surplus. Nevertheless, -North Carolina was soon engaging In vigorous competi tion with Virginia tobacco. As early as 1664, the Virginia Assembly at tempted to sign an agreement with 1 Maryland and North Carolina for cessation of the tobacco culture from i February 1, 1666 to February 1, 1667. 1 This compact was passed by the : North Carolina Assembly, but the Maryland planters would not agree. ' Virginia first placed a tariff on to bacco coming in and then finally in 1679 passed the first of a series of acts extending through the entire Proprietary period prohibiting Caro lina tobacco from being carried into Virginia. As Albemarle had- no seaports and since tobacco was her money crop, her trade was virtually ruined. It was indeed a cruel blow for the to bacco planters of Albemarle. The Virginians went even further by spreading evil reports about North Carolina. They made many state ments regarding the inferiority of North Carolina tobacco. Too, Albe marle was neglected by the Lord Proprietors who were chiefly inter ested in their colony on the Ashley River. They weren't aware of the economic importance of tohacco so they discouraged its culture rather than encouraged it. I believe it imperative that I enlighten the reader still further about the importance of tobacco to Albemarle. It was the chief article of export. New England was the principal market. The yearly crop amounted to more than a million pounds, but little found its way di rectly to England because of the poor harbors. The Navigation Act of 1662 re stricted the carrying trade of the colonies to vessels of English, Irish, and colonial ownership and forbade the shipment of certain articles, in cluding tobacco, elsewhere than to England, Ireland, or some English colony. This act permitted tobacco i to be shipped from one colony to an i other free of duty so it had no harm i ful effects on North Carolina's tobac i co trade with New England. The > colonial consumer enjoyed a decided ; advantage over the British consumer. > In 1675, Parliament corrected this r error by placing an export duty on > certain articles when shipped from ? one colony to another. On tobacco this duty was fixed at a penny a t pound. Tobacco was so important - to Albemarle that die passage of ) this Act caused Culpepper's Rebellion j in 1677. * i In spite of these hindrances, how - ever, the cultivation of tobacco in i creased so that inspection houses y were established along the chief - rivers of the state. The tobacco r which was shipped from North Cfcro i, lina's own ports was nearly all r shipped direct from Port Roanoke s to Great Britain,, and amounted in s 1768 to only 366,000 pounds, or one .. half of one per cent of the total ex t. ported from all the continenttal col e onies. North Carolina raised more t tobacco than this,,however. Dobbs e wrote in 1764 that about 2,000 hogs f heads (2,000,000 pounds) were y grown annually and that -the chief e part of this was shipped through a Virginia ports. By 1765, warehouses p. were estabisbed tor tobacco inspec ? tion at Rolfs in Pasquotank, at Edenton on the Albemarle, Howell's Perry on the Tir in Edgecomh, and at Bath Town. By 176$ there was one warehouse at Haifax, three in Dobbs county, two in Cumberland, and by 1790 there were inspection houses on the Dan River in Caswell county, at Hillsboro on the Eno, and one in Rowan, county. This shows that tobacco was being grown along the valleys of the chief rivers and along the sound. All indications point to the fact that the period be tween 1700 and 1800^ was a period of expansion in tobacco culture in North Carolina. Between 1800 and 1900, there was a period of specialisation within two sections of the state. The Norh Carolina Assembly early passed laws dealing with tobacco. It was customary to place the regula tions concerning tobaco in one series of acts, and those concerning other commodiiets in another series. The tobacco acts, long and detailed, laid down minute specifications for pack ing, and required the county courts} to provide warehouses and appoint inspectors, whose duties were enum erated and whose salaries were fixed. . . By 1754, the North Carolina As sembly had passed strict inspection : laws concerning all commercial to bacco. The inspetors were required to keep a record book numbering the hogshead, net weight of hogshead, t and recording whether the tobacco was sweet or bitter, stemmed or leaf/ : and the grade. The inspectors re ceived thirty pounds of tobacco from 1 each hogshead for this service. Early in North Carolina's history, tobacco was the chief medium of ex change. Records show that by 1673 the Assembly was levying fines to be paid in tobacco. Tobacco notes were made legal tender in 1754. These notes were issued by the inspectors after they had examined the tobacco according to the inspection laws. The planers passed these notes on to the merchants, and they finally came back to the inspectors for re demption. Tobacco was North Caro lina's chief medium in financing its ' part of the troops during the Revolu tion. "? The early methods of cultivation were very simple and unscientific. Different planters at different times. As a rule, the tobacco beds were out by the middle of February. These plant beds were prepared near some swamp. The beds wdre covered with oak leaves so as to protect the plants from frosts. The plants were trans planted after they had attained a height of from six to eight inches. The small planters tilled the soil with crude hoes while the larger planters used a cumbersome wood plow drawn by oxen. After plowing two or three times, the planter top ped his crop so as not to impoverish the leaves. Suckering also was practiced. The tobacco was gathered in June or July. The most common practice was to strip the leaves from the stalks as they ripened and hang them on cords to be cured by the sun and air. The Indians had taught the planters this method. The planters soon built speciaf log houses for cur ing so as to protect their tobacco from the elements. Fire was soon dis covered to aid in the rapidity of the process. When the leaves had been cured to a light brown color, they were allowed to come to "order." Finally, ten to fifteen leaves were. tied into a bundle, and these bundles were carefully packed into hogsheads and sent to market. < The planters sold most of their crop and kept the rest at home for i domestic consumption. Tobacco was not manufactured before the Civil "War. The leaves were allowed to age for a few years and then consumed without any further processing. Ny social custom in the colonial days | was more nearly universal than the use of tobacco. There was some chewing, but the chief forms of its use were pipe-smoking and snuff-, taking. By the middle of the seven teenth century, the men of all classes and the women of the lower classes were smoking pipes. | A the end of the colonial period, the'method of tobacco culture was still rather wasteful and extravagant. The planters used no systematic method because of the vast extent of rich lanus. During the colonial | period, tobacco was grown only on | the dark soils along the rivers/ The tobacco was therefore large, coarse, and strong. During the Revolution, the ship ments of tobacco from North Caro lina became far more valuable than in the decades just before the war. At the beginning of the war, there was a temporary setback, for the British market, to which most of this product Bad gone in the past, was closed. However since tobacco was small in bulk and light in weight in proportion to its value, and since it was a staple of commerce wherever North Carolina vessels went it was soon found to be the commodity best sujted for exportation under the, pre vailing abnormal conditions. Thus about 1777 it came to be grown and shipped in larger and larger quanti ties. Tobacco production was stim ulated by the government policy of accepting it in payment of taxes and of. purchasing it for export The ports of Virginia were blocked in 1778 and much of the tobacco of that state was exported by way of Albe^ : marie Sound thus reversing a process k which had been in evidence ever since [ the firft North Carolina settlers had begun to ship tobacco through vfrir gini* ports. The legislature f this type of to-.! baceo. The increasing.popularity of cig arettes has definitely established to- , bacco culture and. manufacture ip I North Carolina. In 1929, North Carolina led all other states of the Union in tobacco production produc ing 485,300,000 pounds. The pros perity of thousands in North Caro lina today depends directly and in ' ? ? PLANNING Warren County farmers at? now making^lans for seeding crimson dovsr jWd vetch as -winter corrx crops, reports R. H. Bright, farm agent of the N. C. State College Ex tension Service: ? ? ? month. In July, 1989 they wen $14, BS6JK6, n $8^01410 in July 1940? ? Tobacco. ' . ' ? J Minoritiee that f&ar intolerance should ;be practice, tolerance. UJ|Uulv I FRED JONES JEWELRY Stf?r"?hina Musical listruments Attractively Prieed ? Watch and Clock Repairing a Specialty ? ? ? 4" . ?'?-* ? *-''* \ ?; ? ?V.* fv D. R. MORGAN TjjjP^I Vf ^ H m The First Question after the Fire, the Hail, the Tornado, the Auto Theft or Collision! . BE ASSURED AND INSURED NOW WITH A # Safe and Sound Insurance Policy ? THAT WILJj TAKE CARE OF ANY EMERGENCY t! ? V" " ' 1 s ?* We Guarantee Protection in The Best Old Line Stock Companies! ? , . ? . . m . 1 . ? ? * BUILDINGS ? CROPS ? AUTOS .. Fire, Windstorm, Hail, Theft, Collision, Public Liability and Property Damage ? YOURS TO ADVISE AND SERVE? t s; Pm COUNTY INSURANCE AGENCY J. W. JOYNER, Manager Main Street, FarmviUe, N. C. s" ?' ?? - WE ARE PROUD OF THE ? ?' ' *? Farmville Tobacco Market * f ' . ? ? ? AND WE GLADLY JOIN OTHER BUSINESS FIRMS HERE IN EXTENDING TO THE, ' FARMERS OF EASTERN CAROLINA ? ' ^?gs8g?lfeefiSg ? A CORDIAL WELCOME ? f ? .. ' ?-"' ' ' ? . ' ? I ? ?*".?# We Serve... Your Home, Farm and Hardware Needs ? m?-AT-?? . Prices You Gin Afford to Pay ..... ? ? PURINA FEEDS and Lowe Brothers PAINTS and VARNISHES See Us Before You Know We Can Save You Money! ? ' ? . f n i* nAvr? Tr Pres ' > G?E,BALLBW,Secy. ^V , F. M. DAVIS, Jr., rres ?/ i?aimiville-N Car6lin3v We8t^^fe^ef ?***? 3824 ? Farmvme,JN.uiroBn4v ^