GEORGIA STATISTICS 1908 .. 1909
Prepared Under the Direction of T. G. HUDSON
Commissioner of Agriculture
By JOSEPH T. DERRY
Historian and Statistician
and
R. F. WRIGHT
Assistant Commissioner of Agriculture
CHALES P. BYRD STATE. PRINTER
1909
SECTION I.
GEORGIA IN BRIEF.
Georgia, the'last settled of the thirteen original States, has an area of 59,475 square miles, of which 495 are water. The State lies betwen the parallels of 32; 21' and 39" and 35, north latitude, embracing 4 o, 38' and 21". The consequent variety of climate and production is increased by the ToPOGRAPHY of the country. The northern section, containing mountains of from 3,000 to 5,000 feet above sea level, has an average elevation of more than 1,000 feet. Middle Georgia ranges from 180 to 500, and in a few instances to 1,000 feet above sea level. South Georgia has an elevation of from 100 to 500 feet above sea level.
HIGHEST ELEVATIONS. Sitting Bull, middle summit of N antahala in Towns county, has an elevation of 5,046 feet above sea level; Mona, east summit of Nantahala, 5,039 ftet; Enota, also in Towns county, 4,797 feet; Rabun Bald, in Rabun county, 4, 718 feet; Blood, in Union county, 4,468 feet; Tray, in Habersham county, 4,403 feet; Cohutta in Fannin county, 4,155 feet; Dome, in Towns county, 4,042 feet; Grassy in Pickens county, 3,290 feet; Tallulah, in Habersham county, 3,172 feet; Yona, in White county, 3,167 feet.
The Cohutta range has an altitude of 3,000 feet above sea level; Lookout Mountain range at its highest point, 2,408 feet. Other elevations are: Pigeon Mountain, 2,331 feet; Round Mountain, 2,200 feet; Taylor's Ridge and White Oak Mountains, from 1,300 to 1,500 feet; Rocky Face Ridge, near Dalton, from 1,500 to 1,700 feet above sea level; Kennesaw Mountain, near Marietta, with its double peak, 1,809 feet above sea level; Stone Mountain, 14 miles east of Atlanta, 1,686 feet above sea level and between 700 and 800 feet above the surrounding country. A few elevations in Middle Georgia, rising to a considerable height above the level country, are called mountains, as Pine and Oak Mountains on the eastern border of Harris county, and Graves Mountain in Lincoln county. At-
4
GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
lanta, the capital of the State, is upon a ridge, which at its highest point rises to 1,050 feet above sea level. About 3,000 square miles of the region along the Atlantic coast have an elevation of 100 feet. In Southwest Georgia there are hill>. which rise to an altitude of 500 feet above sea level.
Of NINE CLIMA'l'E BELTS found in the United States, eight are represented in Georgia, the lowest on the highest of the mountain peaks having a mean an.nual temperature of less than 40 degrees, while the highest mean annual temperature is in Southern Georgia and is between 70 and 80 degrees.
In North Georgia the July temperature is between 75 and 80 degrees; in South Georgia between 80 and 85 degrees. For the whole State the July temperature is 81.8 degrees.
Snow seldom falls in South Georgia, is more frequent in Middle Georgia, and in the mountain regions increases greatly in frequency and depth.
THE ANNUAL AvERAGE RAINFALL in Georgia is 49.3 inches. The highest is at Rabun Gap, 71.7 inches, and the lowest at Swainsboro, 39.4 inches. For Middle Georgia the annual average rainfall in 49.7 inches; for East Georgia, 41.4 inches; and for Northwest Georgia, 60.3 inches. The average of the summer rainfall is: For North Georgia, 13.6 inches; for Southwest Georgia, 14.5 inches, and for the entire State, 13.4 inches.
AGRICUL'l'URE AND HoRTICULTURE. The great variety of
clim~te, owing to its nearly 40 degrees of latitude and the
varying altitudes of its different sections, enables Georgia to raise a greater variety of products than any other State of the Union.
In Northwest Georgia there is a great diversity of surface and soil. There is abundance of land, either rolling or entirely level, well adapted to the growing of corn, wheat, rye, oats, barly, buckwheat, cow-peas, vegetables, clover, timothy, orchard grass, Bermuda, Johnson, red top and many other grasses useful for hay and pasturage. Fine cotton is raised as far north as Floyd county. This section also produces a great variety of the finest fruits, such as apples, peaches, pears, cherries, and all kinds of berries and grapes.
Cedar, Texas, Broomtown and Vann's valleys are noted for fertility.
STATISTICS, 1908-1909
5
In Northeast Georgia, the most mouhtainous and least populous section, only a little over 12 per cent. of the land is under cultivation. But much of the tillable land has a rich, dark red soil. Little Tennessee Valley in Rabun county, and Nacoochee valley, in White county, are very fertile, and produce abundantly all kinds of crops, grasses and fruits.
Of Middle Georgia 75 per cent. is under cultivation. The central cotton region of the State includes the southern part of Middle and large areas of Southern Georgia. The sand and pine hill's belt of this region covers about 3,000 square miles, and the red hills belt and yellow loam region include together about 6,500 square miles. Throughout this area, except in the sand hills belt, are raised large crops of corn and cotton. All over Middle and Southern Georgia grows the SUGAR CANE, richer in saccharine matter than arty other known plant. In these sections are the largest commercial orchards, the peach being the favorite. The orchards of North Georgia are also very extensive. It is estimated that there are in the ,commercial peach orchards of Georgia between fifteen and nineteen million peach trees in bearing. Since many trees 'were cut down in 1908, the probability is that the number of bearing trees has been somewhat reduced from that of 1908.
THE FINEST COTTON known to commerce is produced on the islands and Atlantic coastal plain of Georgia, South Carolina an<l Florida, the larger part of it being produced in Georgia. This is known as LONG STAPLE or SEA-ISLAND coTToN, and brings the highest price in the market.
Tm: WATERMELON is produced in its highest state of perfection in Georgia, and in the transportation of this crop mote than 10,000 cars annually are needed.
Nuts of the best varieties abound in Georgia. The BLACK WALNUT, richest of all nuts, is found in profusion all over the State. There are also gathered large quantities of HICKORY NUTS. English walnuts and pecans do well in every section. There are large PECAN GROVES near West Point in Troup county and Monticello in Jasper county, several groves in Mitchell county, one of which covers 100 act:es, a grove of 1,01f0 trees in Dougherty county, several groves in Berrien and Tift counties, also in Hancock and Spalding counties,
6
GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
another large grove near Rome, and trees which bear abundantly in Richmond county and in the city of Augusta.
PEANUTS or ground peas (also called goobers and pinders) are raised in great abundance all over Georgia, and those in the southern section are especially valuable for making peanut oil and peanut butter. The spreading branches of the white peanut lie flat upon the ground, while those of the red peanut and Spanish peanut have an upright growth. Well cured peanut hay affords a fine stock feed, especially for ewes in lambing season. The harvesting must takeplace before frost.
THE CHUFA, a species of ground or grass nut, has a pleasant taste, and by some farmers is much esteemed for fattening hogs.
STOCK RAlSING is very profitable to those who give it proper attention. In North Georgia the slopes of the mountairts and hills are well suited to the grazing of stock, and the loqg level stretches of the wire grass section of South Georgia are peculiarly suited to this purpose. In this section cattle and sheep need but little shelter, and for only a few weeks in the winter. In every section of Georgia are found dairy herds of high. grade, and many farmers are giving attention to raising the best types of beef cattle. Horses, mules, swine and poultry of all kinds are plentiful for all purposes.
THE FoREST TIMBERS 'of Georgia are many and valuable. Those of Northwest Georgia embrace six varieties of oak (red, white mountain or chestnut, black, water and post oak), two varieties of pine (short-leaf and long-leaf, the latter differing from the long-leaf of Southern Georgia), poplar, ash, beech, elm, chestnut, hickory, maple, (including the sugar maple), walnut, iron-wood, sugar-berry, sycamore, sweet-gum, black-gum, dogwood, persimmon, sassafras, wild cherry, redbud, warhoo and cedar. Many of these are found in large quantities and are useful for the manufacture of furniture and hardwood finish for dwellings. The oaks and pines are much used in the construction of buildings, the manufacture of furniture, farming utensils, wagons, etc. Large quantities of the oak and pine are annually shipped.
In the forests of Northeast and Middle Georgia are found in the red lands, Spanish, white and post oaks, hickory, chest-
STATISTICS, 1908-1909
7
nut, dogwood, persimmon, sassafras, and in the lowlands of some of the counties short-leaf pine, poplar, ash, walnut, cherry and quckeye. There is more hickory and less pine than on gray, sandy land. With these black-jack is freely interspersed.
Throughout the sand and pine-hill belt of Middle and South Georgia the prevailing timbers are pines, both long and shortleaf. There are also found some scrub black-jack, oak, sweetgums and dogwood and along the streams are undergrowths of bay and gall-berry bushes.
Among the red hills throughout the section lying between the Savannah and Flint rivers, the timbers are oak, hickory, short-leaf pine and dogwood, with beech, maple and poplar on the lowlands.
Throughout the yellow-loam region are oak, hickory and long-leaf pines.
What is known as the long-leaf pine region embraces 17,000 square miles. The forests of this section are a great source of wealth to the State. The timber lands are being put under cultivation, as fast as they are cleared. The pine and palmetto flats around the Okefenokee swamp furnish large quantities of long-leaf pine, cypress and saw palmetto, which are found also along the creek bottom and hammock lands, together with black-gum, tupelo gum, titi and maple.
Throughout the coast region are found also magnificent live-oaks, red and water oaks, red ce.dar, hickory, chincapin, sassafras, cabbage and blue palmetto.
GEOLOGY AND MINING.-Georgia is divided into three main geological areas. .The Pala!ozoic division in which are represented Cambrian, Silurian, Devonian and Carboniferous formations is found in the Northwest section of Georgia and embraces the counties of Dade, Walker, Catoosa, Whitfield, Chattooga, Floyd and the larger portions of Murray, Gordon, Bartow and Polk. Shales, sandstones, limestones, quartzites and cherts are abundant. Valuable deposits of coal, iron, manganese, roofing slate and aluminum (or bauxite), are found in this region of parallel mountain ridges and valleys. The Crystalline area includes a much larger portion of the S~ate, embracing all those parts not in the Pala!ozoic area that run
8
GEORGIA DEPARTMENT Of' AGRICUL'l':URE
north of a line drawn from northeast to southwest, through Augusta, Milledgeville, Macon and Columbus. Here are found granites, gneisses and schists, while on the border of the Palreozoic and Crystalline areas are found the marbles for which Georgia has become famous in every section of the Union. The marble belt traverses Fannin, Gilmer, Pickens and 'Cherokee counties, and the most important quarries are found in Pickens county.
Many localities in the Crystalline area are rich in granite and gneiss, and in several portions of this same area corundum is fotind in considerable quantities.
Before the discovery of gold in California the gold mines of Georgia were highly esteemed. For a time the excitement over the rich mines of California caused a great decrease in mining operations in Georgia. But in recent years there has been a great awakening in the gold region of the State. The gold deposits are found in four belts, of which, the first runs through Rabun, Habersham, White, Lumpkin, Dawson, Forsyth, Cherokee, Cobb; Bartow, Paulding and Haralson counties. The second belt traverses Rabun, Habersham, Hall, Gwinnett, Forsyth, Milton, DeKalb and Fulton counties. A third gold belt passes across Cobb, Paulding and Carroll counties. There is a fourth gold belt which passes through Lincoln, Columbia, McDuffie and Warren counties in the southwest part of the Crystalline area. In the counties of Town~, Union, Gilmer, Fannin and Meriwether are scattering deposits of gold.
The coal fields of Georgia are mostly in Dade and Walker counties.
The iron ores are in the Palreozoic area, the brown ores being found in Bartow, Polk and Floyd counties, and the red ores being mined in Walker and Chattooga counties.
There are large deposits of bauxite (or aluminum) in Georgia. The most extensive are in Floyd and Bartow counties, but this mineral is also found in Polk, Walker and Chattooga counties.
Depostts of corundum occur in Rabun, Towns, Union, Hal>ersham, Carroll and Heard counties. Near the Carolina
STATISTICS, 1908-1909
9
'line in Rabun county on Laurel creek is the largest corrundum mine in Georgia and one of the most noted in the United States.
Of other minerals pyrite is found in Lumpkin county, copper in Murray and Fannin counties; talc in Murray, Fannil'l and Cherokee; mica in Union and Fannin, and barite in Bartow.
Near the town of Emerson, in Bartow county, graphite abounds.
Several precious stones are found in Georgia; amethysts in Rabun county; a few diamonds in Hall; some good moonstones in Upson county, and in the northeast part of the Crystalline area have been found rubies and sapphires of small size.
Limestone for calcimining is found not only in the Palcoozoic and Crystalline areas in Northwest and Northeast Georgia, but also in localities in the coastal plain region which includes all the Southern part of Georgia. In this coastal plain region marls and phosphate abound.
Limestone for building purposes is found in beds throughout the counties embraced in the Palceozoic area and in Hall and Habersham counties of the Crystalline area. Through all that part of Georgia north of what is called the fall line, which runs from Augusta through Macon to Columbus, are found clays suitable for the manufacture bf common brick and the coarser grades of earthenware.
Immediately below this fall line there is a narrow belt running across the State in which are found clays suitable' for the manufacture of porcelain, enameled brick, china ware, terra cotta, sewer pipe, etc.
The annual output of all the minerals of Georgia is more than $8,000,000.
MINltRAL SPRINGS are found in Georgia in the Palceozoic and Crystalline areas. Among those of m'edicinal value are chalybeate, sulphurous and lithia waters. According::to the repcirf of the United States Geological Survey, the output of the mineral waters o Georgia in 1898 was. 197,100 gillons,
valued at $39,230.
10
GE:ORGIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
ARTESIAN WELLS are confined, with a few exceptions, to the coastal plain region. Almost all this portion of Jhe State is underlaid by pervious beds, which, when pierced by the drill, furnish large quantities of pure, wholesome water. Not all of these water-bearing beds furnish flowing wells. But those non-flowing wells furnish large quantities of pure water, which can be brought to the surface by pumps.
The average depth of the wells already bored is about 450 feet. The various strata penetrated consist of soft limestones, clays and sands. Thus the wells can be had for very little outlay of money.
The sanitary advantages that have resulted to many towns and localities all over the South Georgia coastal plain through the pure, wholesome drinking water of the artesian wells, are seen in the fact that sections once dreaded as malarial and sickly are now considered among the most salubrious in the 'State and are increasing more rapidly in population than even the hill ,country of North Georgia. The leading towns of this section are now supplied with water from artesian wells.
WATER PowERS.-The streams of Georgia furnish water powers in numerous localities in varying amounts from the little cascade that runs a small neighborhood mill, to the great shoals and falls that furnish from 20,000 to 30,000 horsepower, and run mighty flouring mills and cotton factories.
With the exception of a few notable cases, the largest water powers of Georgia occur at or just above what is known as the Southern Fall Line, running from Augusta on the northeast down through Macon in Central Georgia to Columbus on the southwest, where the streams pass from the hard rocks of the Crystalline area to the softer formations of the Coastal plain; and on the western Fall Line, formed by the contact of the Palrec>zc>ic and Crystalline areas in the northwest, passing through Polk, Bartow, Gordon, and Murray counties.
Along these fall lines are located the larger water powers. But numerous other powers are to be found at various points on different streams throughout the State.
MANUP'ACtuREs.-Georgia, on account of her progressive spirit, displayed especially in manufacturing enterprises and
railroad construction, receive~ in the early thirties the proud
STATISTICS, 1908-1909
11
title, "Empire State of the South," and this title she still worthily wears. By the United States census reports of 1900 there were 7,504 manufacturing establishments in Georgia, with a total capital of $89,789,656, employing 83,842 persons and turning out products valued at $106,654,527. Of these establishments, 3,015-having a capital of $79,303,316, employing 83,336 wage-earners and manufacturing products valued at $94,532,368-were selected for comparison with a class of establishments included in the census of 1905, when the number of establishments reported was 3,219, the capital $135,211,551, the number of wage earners 92,749 and the value of products . $151,040,455. The percentage of increase in this class was Jherefore 6.8 per cent. in the number of establishments, 70.5 per cent. in capital, 11.3 per cent. in the number <;>f wage earners, and 59.8 per cent. in the value of products.
By the twelfth census there were in Georgia 68 cotton mills, with 817,345 spindles and 19,398 looms. In United States bulletin Number 63, on the supply and distribution of cotton for the year ending August 31, 1906, Georgia makes the following showing: 138 establishments (or mills), 1,573,450 spindles, of which 26,452 were idle and 1,546,998 in operation. The number of active spindles in 1905 was 1,331,765. Thus there was an increase of 215,233 active spindles from 1905 to 19,06. The number of active spindles in Georgia on January 1, 1909, was 1,760,500, and of looms, 36,355. Tota:l number of spindles 1,794,000. The number of mills for year ending August 31st, 1907 was 149, and for year ending August 1st, 1908, the number was 154. There was a slight falling off in 1908 in the number of pounds of cotton used by the mills, due to financial stringency. The amount used was about 230,000,000 pounds. The cotton taken for consumption in 1906 was 510,329 bales, the cotton consumed was 513,814 bales1 weighing 248,649,791 pounds. The ratio of consumption to production in 1905 was 23.9 per cent., and in 1906 it was 29.2 per cent. The average gross weight of the Georgia bale was 483.7 pounds.
In bleached cotton goods Georgia stands fourth in the Union with 24,265,583 square yards. The cotton gins, which in 1900 numbered 4,729, running for four months, have increased to
12
GltORGIA DEPARTMENT Oil AGRICULTURE
more than 8,000, jn about 4,700 establishments or ginneries.
It was while Eli Whitney was living in Georgia that he in-
vented the cotton gin. The cotton oil mills in operation in 1901 numbered 58 and
paid abov~ $5,000,000 for cotton seed, whose finished products were valued at $14,000,000. In 1904 there were 104 cotton oil mills and the increase of their business has been correspondingly great. For the season of 1906-07, there were registered 129. There are now (1909) in Georgia 130 oil mills whose finished products are valued at $17,000,000.
The fertilizer establishments registered with the Commissioner of Agriculture for the season of 1903 and 1904 numbered 145. . l\1any of these do a very heavy business all over. the. Soutl;lern St~te~.. For the season of 1906-'07 they: numbered 198, and 220 in .1909.
Georgia stood ahead of all the States in the manufacture of turpentine and resin in 1900 and exported 14,623,328 gallons of 5pirits. of. turpentine and .1,408,928 barrels of turpentine, rosin ..md pitch. There :were reported in 1900, 1,254 establishm~nts with :a capital of $11,802,716 engaged in the lumber industry. In the manufacture of turpentine and rosin Georgia was second in 1905 and Florida first. In 1907 the amount of lumber cut in Georgia was 853,697,000 feet.
OTHER MANUfACTURES are/ printing establishments, flour and grist mills, woolen mills, furniture factories, ornamental iron works, foundries, blast furnaces, carriage factories, car shops, black-smithing.. and wheelwrighting, manufactories of brick1. tile and .pottery,. manufactories of paints, chemicals, ice, electric light plants, carpenter work, canning factories, cream~ eries .and numerous others. Among the most important man~ ufactories of the State are the marble and stone.works, turning out the building and paving stones and splendid marbles for which. Georgia is so famous throughout the Union. By the report for 1905 Georgia-had six creameries, and there are hun~ dreds employed in the dairy business in every sction of tht? State.
Georgia had, in 1905, 114 flour and grist mills, with a.capital of $1,875,7.18, with products valued at $8,178,926 for wheat and corn.
STATIS'l'ICS, 1908-1909
13
Comparative statement of merchant mills in Georgia according to U. S. Census report for 1900 and 1905:
.iJ
;
RAW M'ATERIAL,
.:!
~"'
WHEAT.
CENSUS 'E....
""S.:aSl Bushels.
Cost.
i~'~
PRODUCTS, FLOUR Barrels. Value.
Rank.
...
"" "
.~""
.,.....,:
e~
~~
'E . .,<l
-.;~ ~~
....~ti
..,.....",,"
... .<::
~~
...
i""l"
0
0."..
'"<l
....<::
<";."~."'
I 1905
1900
1
1
69,,3,186,908 $3,618,164 1671,8091$3,747,4661 26
58 2,646,4561 2,142.404; 596,020 2,622,70!> 25
I$44..4744! $54..4508
$1.14 81
\
Comparative statement of corn ground in Georgia by U. S. Census report for 1905 and 1906:
CENSUS. 1905 1900
Bushels. 5,138,934 3,792,211
CoRN. Cost.
$ 3,211,483 1,863,496
Value. $4,431,460
There are many small flour and grist mills not numbered in
the census report.
When the colony of Georgia was founded by Oglethorpe,
it was intended to be a silk producing country. Efforts are
being made to revive this industry. In 1902 a silk-growers
association was formed in Atlanta, consisting of members from
many districts in the State. A plan is now on foot to con-
struct a silk mill of very large capital at Tallulah Falls.
RAILROADS.-Georgia has a magnificent railroad system, coveting the State lik~ a vast net work, and having a total of
6,704.44 miles. The grand trunk lines are very energetic in
advertising the advantages of the sections through which they
pass, the Southern and Central being especially noted for the
good, work which they are doing in Georg;a.
14
GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
I
ELECTRIC LINES traverse not only all the large cities, but many of the smaller cities and towns, connecting them with their suburbs and in many instances with neighboring towns.
Goon RoADS.-The number of good country roads is rapidly increasing all over the State. Among the best are the roads running out from Atlanta to College Park, Peachtree Creek, the waterworks and Decatur. Many miles of well-grad~d, macadamized roads are found in the counties of Fulton, Floyd, Bartow, Bibb, Richmond, Jefferson, Emanuel, Spalding, Meriwether and Chatham. The shellroad from Savannah to Bonaventure and Thunderbolt, also the road from that city to Beaulieu and Isle of Hope, were noted before the Civil War. Some of the macadamized roads leading out from Rome, in Floyd county, are built of hard limestone and marble. The country roads which radiate from Augusta and Macon, forming the favorite drives of the citizens, are among the best. The same may be said of the shellroads of Glynn county centering in the city of Brunswick, and ~f the well-graded drives through the fragrant pines that go out from Thomasville into the surrounding country.
MAIL FACILITIES.-Not only do the cities and towns of Georgia have the best of mail facilities, but through tne bounty of "Uncle Sam," the farmers in every section have the rural free delivery, which furnishes them letters and daily papers on the date of publication.
BANKS.-By the report of the State Treasurer for the year 1906, there were in Georgia 83 National banks with a paid in capital of $8,076,700, and individual deposits of $29,561,709. There were 418 State banks with $16,906,292 capital, and over $42,000,000 deposits. There are now (1909) 100 National banks with a paid in capital of $11,101,360, and individual deposits of $30,191,000. Of State banks there are 482, and of private banks 35, with capital of about $18,000,000, and deposits amounting to $43,882,591.
AssESSED VALUATION.-In 1900, according to the report of the Comptroller-General, the assessed valuation of property in Georgia was $434,336,134; in 1906 it was $624,465,472. The true valuation is double this amount, or $1,248,930,944. The
STATISTICS,' 1908-1909
15
bon'ded debt was $7,531,500 net, and the tax rate was $5.30 per $1,000.
EouCA'l'ION.-Georgia is well provided with schools, both public and private. The public school system is an excellent one, and is constantly being improved.
It embraces 7,700 schools, of which 4,919 are for white children, and 2,781 for colored. Of a total of 9,180 teachers, 5,997 _ are white and 3,188 colored. Of teachers who have enj'oyed a normal school training, there are 1,791 white and 447 colored, 2,238 in all. The number of pupils enrolled in 1902 was 258,984 white and 216,359 colored, being a total of $439,645.
The average daily attendance was 159,562 white and 105,826 colored, a total of 265,388. One of the leading higher institutions of learning in the State is the University of Georgia, of which the principal buildings are at Athens. This has numerous branches, as follows: North Georgia Agricultural College, at Dahlonega; Georgia School of Technology, at Atlanta; Georgia Normal and Industrial College for Ladies, at Milledgeville; Georgia State Normal College for both sexes, at Athens; Georgia State Industrial College for Colored Youths, near Savannah.
Several other noted schools are affiliated with the University of Georgia, but do not receive State funds. These are: South Georgia Military and Agricultural College, at Thomasville; Middle Georgia iMlitary and Agricultural College at Hamilton. The Augusta Medical College is one of the departments of the State University. in Atlanta are two medical colleges, and one dental college.
Two of the most noted colleges in the South are in Georgia: Emory College, at Oxford, the property of the North and South Georgia and Florida Conferences of the Methodist Episcopal Church (South), and Mercer University, the property of the Baptists of Georgia.
The first college in the world chartered for the purpose of of bestowing literary degrees upon ladies is Wesleyan Female College, at Macon, the property of the Methodists of Georgia and Florida. Shorter College, a Baptist institution, at Rome, was built and endowed by Alfred Shorter, of Rome, and Agnes
16
GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Scott Institute, at Decatur, was built by Colonel George W. Scott, liberally endowed and turned over to the Presbyterian Synod of Georgia. Lucy Cobb Institute, at Athens, was founded mostly through the efforts of General Thomas R. R. Cobb, one of Georgia's greatest orators and most gallant soldiers~ Other excellent colleges are: Southern Female College, College Park, near Atlanta; Southern Female College, at, LaGrange; LaGrange Female College, at LaGrange; Andrew Female College, at Cuthbert; Monroe Female College, at Forsyth; St. Stanislaus College for Roman Catholic Priests, near Macon; Young L. Harris Institute, at the town of Young Harris; Brenau Female College, at Gainesville; Piedmont Institute, Rockmart; South Georgia College at McRae. With
the exception of the State Industrial College for Colored Youths, at College, near Savannah, all the above named institutions are for whites exclusively.
For the colored people there are the following institutions: Atlanta University, Clark University, Spellman Seminary, ~orris Brown College, and Gammon University, all of Atlanta; Payne Institute, at Augusta, under the auspices of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. In the private schools and colleges of Georgia, are 10,097 whites and 4,877 colored pupils, being a total of 14,974.
LOCATION OF THE ELEVEN DISTRICT AGRICUL-
. TURAL SCHOOLS.
Principals
1st Congressional District, Statesboro
J. W. Hendricks
2d Congressional District, Tifton
W. G. Acree
3d Congressional District, Americus 4th Congressional District, Carrollton
J. M. Collum
J. H. Melson
5th Congressional District, Monroe
G. C. Adams
6th Congressional District, Barnesville
M. B. Dennis
7th Congressional District, Powder Springs H. R. Hunt
8th Congressional District, Madison Joseph F. Hart, Jr.
9th Congressional District, Clarkesville W. H. Maxwell
lOth Congressional District, Granite Hill, near Sparta
J. N. Rogers
11th Congressional District, Douglas
C. W. Davis
STATISTICS, 1908-1909
17
R~tLIGION.-The leading Christian denominations are well represented in Georgia, the Baptists and Methodists being the most powerful in numbers, wealth and influence. The Baptists have a total active membership of 368,000. The church buildings number 3,586. In their Sunday schools are 76,052 ptipils. The Methodists have 272,000 church members, 3,205 churches, and 117,828 Sunday school pupils. The Presbyterians have 18,000 church meinbers, 237 church buildings, and 12,600 Sunday school pupils. The Congregationalists have 4,714 me111bers, 65 church buildings, and with 137 church buildings, and 4,400 Sunday school pupils. The Disciples of Christ have 9,807 members, 110 church buildings, and 3,147 Sunday school pupils. The Roman Catholics have 20,000 church members, 40 church buildings and 2,500 pupils. The Hebrews in Georgia number about 6,200.
CHARITABLE INSTI'rUTIONS.-Georgia has many benevolent institutions, some of the most prominent of which are: The Orphan House at Bethesda, near Savannah, founded in 1739 by Rev. George \hitefield, in whose honor one of the counties of Georgia was named; the State Lunatic Asylum, at Milledgeville; Georgia Institute for the Deaf and Dumb, at Cave
Spring; Academy for the Blind, at Macon; Female Asylum, at
Savannah; Augusta Orphan Asylum, at Augusta; Orphan Home of the North Georgia Conference of the M. E. Church, South, at Decatur, about eight miles from the city of Atlanta; Orphan Home of the South Georgia Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, at Macon; Mumford Institute Home for Boys and Girls, near Macon; Appleton Ot;phan Home (Episcopal), at Macon; Baptist Orphans' Home, Hapeville, near Atlanta, and the Abram's Home for Widows (a Hebrew Institution), in Savannah.
STATE GovERNMENT.-The present constitution of the State of Georgia, which was adopted in 1877, guards carefully the rights of the people and prevents extravagant appropriations by the Legislature. The governor is elected for two years and can be re-elected for a second term; after that he retires. His salary is $5,000 per anrium. The State House officers are as follows: Attorn,ey-General, Comptroller-General, Adjutant-
18
G~toRGIA DitPAR'l'MEN'I' o:F AGRICuL'I'uRit
General, Treasurer, Secretary of State, State School Commissioner, Commissioner of Agriculture, State Geologist, State Librarian, Commissioner of Pensions, three Prison Comissioners, and three Railroad Commissioners.
The Supreme Court consists of one 'chief Justice and five Associate Justices. There are twenty-four Superior Court Circuits, each having a judge and solicitor. There is also a Court of Appeals consisting of three Justices. Georgia is represented in the National Congress by two Senators and eleven Representatives. Thus the State has thirteen votes. in the electoral college;
PoLITICAL DIVISIONS AND PoPULATioN.-Georgia has 146 counties, enjoying such privileges of self-government, that one of the United States Government publications speaks of them as so many little commonwealths. As has been said already, the population of Georgia has shown a steady increase from the first census in 1790 to the last estimate of the U. S. Census Bureau in 1906.
We give here the population of Georgia at each Federal census:
82,548 in 1790. 162,686 in 1800. 252,433 in 1810. 340,983 in 1820. 576,823 in 1830. 691,392 in 1840. 906,185 in 1850.
1,057,286 in 1860. 1,184,109 in 1870. 1,542,180 in 1880. 1,837,353 in 1890. 2,216,331 in 1900. 2,443,719 in 1906. 2,529,000 in 1908 (Est'd.)
The total white population in 1900 was 1,181,109, and the total negro population was 1,034,998. There were besides 204 Chinese, 1 J ap, and 19 Indians. The foreign-born population numbered 7,"603 males and 4,800 females, a total of 12,403. The total white population in 1908 is estimated at 1,369,000, and the colored at 1,160,000.
There are 372 incorporated places in Georgia, of which 40 had a population in 1900 of more than 2,000. Of these, 13 had a population in excess of 5,000. Atlanta, the capital, had 89,872, and by the report of the United States Census Bureau
STATISTICS, 1908-1909
19
it had 10'1,984 in 1906. Savannah, the chief seaport, had 54,244, and_ by the U. S. Census report for 1906, contains in the corporate limits 68,000 inhabitants. Augusta, the greatest cotton manufacturing city of the South, had 39,441, but now bas 43,000. By the same report, Macon, which had 23,272, has now 32,692. Columbus, the second great cotton manufacturing city of the. South, had 17,614, and is now estimated to contain 20,000 inhabitants, although the U. S. Census report gives it only 17,800 for 1906. The other cities of Georgia, which in 1900 had a population in excess of 5,000, are: Athens, 10,245; Brunswick, 9,081; Americus, 7,674; Rome, 7;291; and including suburbs, 14,000; Griffin, 6,857; Vvaycross, 5,919; Valdosta, 5,613; Thomasville, 5,322.
Of these towns the U. S. Census Report for 1906 gives to Athe1_1s 11,211 inhabitants, Brunswick 9,453, but does not estimate the population of any place that fell below 8,000 in 1900.
Some other important and rapidly growing towns of Georgia are here given with their population in 1900: Cartersville, 3,135; Cedartown, 2,823; Dalton, 4,315; Gainesville, 4,382 ; Toccoa, 2,176; Marietta, 4,446; Elberton, 3,834; Covington, 2,062; Milledgeville, 1,219 (the former capital of the State) ; Washington, 3,300; Barnesville, 3,036; Tallapoosa, 2,128; Newnan, 3,654; LaGrange, 4,274; Waynesboro, 2,030; Sandersville, 2,023; Dublin, 2,987; Hawkinsville, 2,103; Fort Vaiiey, 2,022; Dawson, 2,926; Cuthbert, 2,641; Cordele, 3,473; Albany, 4,606; Bainbridge, 2,641; Thomasville, 5,322; Moultrie, 2,221; Quitman, 2,281; Madison, 1,992; Eatonton, 1,823, ,md Carroiiton, 1,998. Ail these towns have had a gratifying growth since 1900, but no exact figures have been given for 1906.
Of the 372 incorporated places in Georgia considerably more than 100 are lighted by electricity, have water works and telephone systems. Long distance telephone connections like the telegraph, penetrate to almost every nook and corner of the State.
20
GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
AN INVENTORY OF THE WATER POWERS OF GEORGIA.*t
BY S. W. McCALLIE,
State Geologist and Member of the Georgia Conservation Commission.
In making an inventory of the natural resources of Georgia, one of the most important questions for consideration is the water powers. This subject is of special interest just now, as the National Conservation Commission makes the startling statement that at the present increasing r9te of the consumption of coal, which is now the main source of mechanical power, our coal supply will be so depleted as to approach exhaustion before the middle of the next century. It is estimated that the steam powers of the country use approximately 260,000,000 tons of coal annually, or considerably more than one-half of the production of 1907. It is further estimated that this coal produces about 26,000,000 steam horsepower for all manufacturing purposes, motor-power, electric lights, etc., which power we are told is less than one-half of our water powers n9w going to waste. In other words, we are told, if only one half of our water powers were utilized it would save annually 260,000,000 tons of coal and thereby lengthen our approaching coal famine more than a century and a half. What is here said of the wasted water powers of our country at large may likewise be said of many of the individual States, .such as Georgia, which has extensive undeveloped water powers.
In the last fourteen years, the Geological Survey of Georgia, in co-operation with the U. S. Geological Survey, has been continuously engaged in collecting data in regard to our streams. While this data is by no means yet complete, sufficient information in now at hand to enable us to calculate with considerable degree of certainty the approximate water power of the State. For convenience of description, the water powers will here be described under the following hydrographic basins: The Savannah basin, the Ogeechee basin,
The writer is under obligations to Mr. M. R: Hall, District Manager, Water Resources Branch, U. S. Geological Survey, for assisting in collecting the data for this paper.
t This article first appeared in The Manufacturers' Record of March 11, 1909, published
in Baltimore, Maryland.
S'I'A'l'ISTICS, 1908-1909
TENNESSEE
NORTH CAROLINA
FLORIDA GEoRGIA HYDROGRAPHIC BASINS.
22
GEORGIA DEPARTMENT Olt AGRICULTURE
the Altamaha basin, the Apalachicola basin, the Mobile basin, and the Tennessee basin.
THE SAVANNAH DRAINAGE BASIN.-The Savannah drainage basin ab'ove Augusta, Georgia, where practically all of the water power is found, comprises an area of 7,300 square miles. The main water powers of this basin, occurring in Georgia, are found on the following streams: The Savannah River (formed by the Tugaloo and the Seneca Rivers 100 miles above Augusta) the Tugaloo River, the Chattooga River, the Tallulah River, the Broad River, the South Broad River, the Hudson Fork, the Middle Broad River, the Beaver Dam Creek. The indicated horsepower of these several rivers is here given.
INDICATED HoRSEPOWER oJt THE SAVANNAH RIVER DRAINAGE BASIN.
Section of River
Minimum horsepower
I I Minimum horsepower
during six highwater months
---1 Savannah River:
\
From Augusta to Seneca River 92,890
Tugaloo River:
Fr~~e~~~~~-t~-~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~-~15,160
Chattooga River:
I
From Tallulah River to West Fork 21,300
Tallulah River:
I
From mouth to head-------------~24,350
Broad River:
From mouth to opposite Carnes-
South
ville ----------
Broad River:
-
-------
-
-----1I
15,632
Fr~:fd~0~~~-~~~-~-~-~~i~~~~~-~ 1,780
Hudson Fork:
From mouth to opposite Homer,
Georgia ----------------------- 1,830
Middle Broad River:
From mouth to opposite Carnes- I Beavv;;lb~;;;-c;;;k~----------------~ '1 270
From mouth to opposite Elberton__ 1,250
_j TotaL ___________________ 175,462
139,070
22,730 31,900 37,370
29,494
2,460
2,700
1,620 1,840 269,184
S'l'ATIS'l'ICS, 1908-1909
23
Tm: 0GEECHEE DRAINAGE BASIN.-This basin; which is the smallest of the several drainage basins above named, lies almost wholly within the Coastal Plain immediately south and west of the Savannah basin. The drainage area above Millen is 1,900 square miles. The chief stream is the Ogeechee River, formed by the junction of the Williamson Swamp and the Rocky Comfort creeks. The indicated horsepower of the Ogeechee drainage basin is given in the following table:
lNDICA'l'ED HoRSEPOWER o:F 'l'HE 0GEECHEE RIVER DRAINAGE BASIN
Section of River
Minimum horsepower
Minimum
during six high
horsepower
water months
Ogeechee River:
I
At Millen -----------------------~ 3,110
Cannouchee River:
At Groveland ------------------- 785
I TotaL ____________________13-,89-5
7,770 1,960 9,730
THE AL'l'AMAHA DRAINAGE BASIN.-The Altamaha drainage basin is one of the largest drainage systems of the State. The main streams forming the system, namely, the Oconee and the Ocmulgee Rivers, rise in the northern central part ofthe State and after flowing many miles to the southeast finally unite in Montgomery county to form the Altamaha, which, in turn, continues to the southeast, entering the Atlantic Ocean at Darien. In addition to the two rivers above named the more important streams of this basin are the Middle Oconee River, North Oconee River, Mulberry Fork, Apalachee River, South River, Alcovy River, Yellow River, and the Ohoopee River. Practically all of the water power of the streams here mentioned, with the exception df the Ohoopee River, is confined to the Piedmont Plateau north of Macon. The estimated horsepower of these individual streams is as follows:
24
GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
INDICATED HoRSEPoWER oF TH'E ALTAMAHA RIVER DRAINAGE BASIN
Section of River
IMinimum horsepower
I Minimum
during six high-
horsepower
water months
Oconee River:
From Milledgeville to junction of
Middle add North Rivers-------1 17,480 I
Middle Oconee River:
From mouth to head-------------1 2,748 I
North Oconee River:
From mouth to opposite Maysville_l 3,350 I
Mulberry Fork: From mouth to Mathis' bridge___ _! 213 I
Apalachee River:
.
From mouth to High Falls bridge_ I 1,768 I
Ocmulgee River:
I From Macon to Yellow River_ ____ l 12,640 I
South River: From Yellow River to Southern
Railway bridge --------------- 2,887 I
Towaliga River:
From mouth to head of High
Shoals -----------------------1 7'1:2 J Alcovy River:
From foot of Newton Factory
Shoals to Dabney's bridge------- I 1,031 I
Yellow River:
From mouth to head of Simmons'
dam --------------------------1 3,179 I
Ohoopee River:
At Reidsville --------------------1 1,050 I
Tota'----------------------1 47,088 I
26,510 4,371 5,360
340 2,885 21,060
4,910
1,464
2,062
6,690 2,620 78,272
T:aE APALACHICOLA DRAINAGE BASIN.-The Chattahoochee River is the most important river of this basin. It rises in the high Blue Ridge mountains in the extreme northern part of the State and after flowing to the southwest and south for .moi-e than 400 miles finally unites with the Flint River at the Georgia-Florida line to form the Apalachicola River. The
STATISTICS, 1908-1909
25
drainage area of the Chattahoochee River above Columbus, where the main water power occurs, is 4,900 square miles. Other important streams of the Apalachicola basin are the Flint River, Ichawaynochaway Creek, Muckalee River, Big Potato Creek, and Sweetwater Creek. The estimated avail~ able horsepower of these streams is here given.
INDICATED HoRSEPOWER oP THE APALACHICOLA RivER DRAINAGE BASIN
Section of River
Minimum horsepower
Minimum during six high-
horsepower
water months
Chattahoochee River:
I
I From Columbus to Santee Creek---1118,570
Flint River: From Albany to head of Flat Shoals 45,774
Ic~~:~~ooc:tt~;:-~~~~~~-----------~ 2,620
I Muckalee River (including Kincha- I foonee Creek) : From mouth to___________________ 4,580
Big Potato Creek: From mouth to__________________ 1,800
Sweetwater Creek: From mouth to head of Austell
Shoals ------------------------ 442
T o t a L - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 1 7 3 , 786
189,190 75,950 4,710
7,360 3,240
1,100 281,550
THE MoBILt DRAINAGE BASIN.-This basin, so called because its waters enter the Gulf through the Mobile River, is drained by the Coosa River and its tributari~s, the most important of which are the Etowah River, Coosawattee River, Cartecay River, Connasauga River, and Chattooga River. That part of the basin in Georgia includes a large part of northwest Georgia to the north and east of Rome and comprises an area of 4,649 miles. The estimated horsepower of the above named streams are here given.
26
GEORGIA DEPARTMENT CF, AGRICULTURE
INDICATED HoRSEPOWER oF THE MoBILE DRAINAGE BASIN.
Section of River
IMinimum horsepower
Minimum during six high
horsepower
water months
Etowah River:
I
From mouth to head--------------1 26,697
Chattooga River:
I
From above Little River to oppo- I
site Summerville ---------------1 687
Coosawattee River:
I
From mouth to EllijaY------------1 18,900
Cartecay River:
I
From, Ellijay to mouth of Pumpkin I
Creek -------------------------1 4,590
Connasauga River:
I
Fry~k~~f;ee:~~l~-~~-~~~~--a-~~-~~-~ 6,650 .
TotaL ____________________ ~ II- 58,52I4 j
40,039 1,180
35,840 6,880
11,865 95,804
TENNESSEE DRAINAGE BASIN.-Two small detached catchment areas belonging to the Tennessee basin occur in the extreme northern part of the State, one along the GeorgiaNorth Carolina line and the other along the Georgia-Tennessee line. The main streams of the former area are the Ocoee, the Hiwassee and the Nottely Rivers, while those of the latter are Chickamauga River, West Chickamauga Creek and North Chickamauga Creek. The approximate horsepower of these several streams is as follows:
INDICATED HoRSEPOWER oF THE TENNESSEE: RIVER DRAINAGE BASIN
Section of River
Minimum horsepower
Minimum
during six high
horsepower
water months
Chickamauga River:
\
From mouth to near head _____ :_ ___ , 368
736
West Chickamauga Creek:
From mouth to near head---------1 425
835
STATISTICS, 1908-1909
27
Section of River
Minimum horsepowr
Minimum
during six high-
horsepower
water months
l North Chickamauga Creek:
I
From mouth to near head _________ 1,330
Ocoee River and Tributaries________ 22,536
---------------------1 Hiwassee River and Tributaries_____ 3,650
Nottely River
5,586
! TotaL _____________________ 33,895
2,650 44,072
6,720 10,320
65,333
THJt AGGRltGATJt vVATER PowJtR.-'The aggregate horse-
power of all the streams above named is here given:
AGGRltGATJt HoRSEPOWltR oF THJt RIVERS oF GJtoRi:aA.
River Basins
Minimum horsepower
Minimum
during six high-
horsepower
water months
--------------------1 Savannah Basin -------------------~175,462
Ogeechee Basin
3,895
Altamaha Basin ------------------- 47,088
----------------------1 Apalachicola Basin -----------------1173,786
Mobile Basin
57,524
Tennessee Basin ------------------- 33,895
1--
'Total_ __________________ ---1491,650
I
269,184 9,730
78,272 281,550 95,804
65,333
799,873
In nearly all of the above estimates only 90 per cent. of the actual fall of the streams has been given and the indicated horsepower has been reduced in most cases to 80 per cent., so that the results are thought to be quite conservative and well within the practical working limits. In these estimates, we have made no allowance whatever for storage, which, in many cases, would increase the minimum power from two to three times, nor have we taken into consideration a great number of small streams which would probably aggregate a power approximately equal to the water power now being utilized by the State.
28
GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Omitting for the present these two factors, which would, no doubt, increase the water power more than two-fold, we still have, at the annual lowest known stream stage, an approximate aggregate of 500,000 horsepower. This power, if produced by steam, would require an annual consumption of about 7,000,000 tons of co11l, or more than one-half of the coal production of Alabama in 1907. The money value of this power, reckoning a horsepower at $20.00 per annum, is $10,000,000, which is nearly equal to twice the State's annual income from taxes and all other sources.
By the use of storage dams, or by the use of auxiliary steam power for short periods during the dry season, fully 1,000,000 horsepower, at a low estimate, could be utilized. The enormity of this power may be better understo.od when it is stated that the combined labors of Alabama's coal miners in 1907, consisting of an army of more than 20,000 strong, could not supply the furnaces with coal which would be necessary to produce a steam power equal to Georgia's water power.
STATISTICS, 1908-1909
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF COUNTIES OF GEORGIA.
For Agricultural and ,Horticultural Products of each, sey Section on Ag-riculture and Horticulture.
For Mineral Products of each, see Section on Geology and Mining.
For Forest Timbers of each, see Section on Forest Timbers.
Price of lands per acre
according to
Counties.
Section of State.
location and improvement.
Appling -----------Southern _______ From $ 5.00 to $ 25.00
Baker -------------Southern _______ From 5.00 to 50.00
Baldwin ______ ----Middle _________ From 12.00 to 100.00 Banks. ____________ Northern _______ From 4.00 to 80.00
Bartow -----------Northern _______ From 10.00 to 100.00
Ben HilL __________southern _______ From 5.00 to 100.00
Berrien -----------Southern _______ From 5.00 to 100.00
Bibb --------------Middle _________ From 10.00 to 250.00
Brooks ------------Southern _______ From 5.00 to 100.00
Bryan -------------Southern _______ From 2.00 to 30.00
Bulloch -----------Southern _______ From 5.00 to 100.00
Burke -------------Middle _________ From 5.00 to 120.00 Butts _____________Middle _________ From 5.00 to 100.00
Calhoun ___________Southern _______ From 5.00 to 75.00
Camden ___________Southern _______ From 2.50 to 75,00
Campbell __________ Northern _______ From 3.00 to 40.00 Carroll ____________Middle _________ From 4.00 to 60.00
Catoosa ___________ Northern _______ From 5.00 to 60.00
Charlton ----------Southern _______ From 2.00 to 10.00
Chatham __________Southern _______ From 10.00 to 500.00
Chattahoochee ----_,Southern _______ From 3.00 to 15.00
Chattooga _________ Northern _______ From 5.00 to 80.00
Cherokee __________ Northern _______ From 4.00 to 60.00
Clarke ____________ Northern _______From 5.00 to 150.00 Clay ______________ Southern _______ From 3.00 to 50.00
Clayton ___________ Middle _________ From 10.00 to 50.00
Clinch --------~---Southern _______ From Cobb _____________ Northern _______ From
Coffee ____________ Southern _______ From
3.00 to 45.00 5.00 to 150.00 5.00 to 75.00
30
G:E;oRGIA DE:PARTME:NT oF AGRICULTURE
Colquitt ----------Southern _______ From Columbia _________Middle _________From
Coweta ---------'--Middle _________ From Crawford ---------Middle _________ From Crisp -------------Southern _______ From Dade -------------~orthern _______ From Dawson ----------~orthern _______ From Decatur -----------Southern _______ From DeKalb -----------Northern _______ From Dodge ____________ Southern _______ From
Dooly ------------Southern _______ From Dougherty ________ Southern _______ From Douglas __________ Northern _______ From Early _____________ Southern _______ From Echols ____________ Southern _______ From Effingham ________ Southern _______ From Elbert ____________ Northern _______ From Emanuel _________ Middle _________ From Fannin ___________ Northern _______ From Fayette ___________Middle _________ From Floyd _____________ Northern _______ From Forsyth ___________Northern _______ From Franklin __________Northern _______ From Fulton ____________Northern _______ From Gilmer ____________ Northern _______ From Glascock __________Middle _________ From Glynn ____________Southern _______ From Gordon ___________ Northern _______ From Grady ____________Southern _______ From Greene ____________Middle _________ From Gwinnett _________Northern _______ From Habersham ________ Northern _______ From Hall ______________ Northern _______ From Hancock __________ Middle _________ From Haralson __________ Northern _______From Harris ____________ Middle _________ From Hart ______________ Northern _______ From Heard ____________ M-iddle _________ From Henry ____________Middle _________ From
5.00 to 3.00 to 5.00 to 3.00 to 5.00 to 2.50 to 2.50 to 5.00 to 5.00 'to 3.00 to 5.00 to 10.00 to 3.00 to 5.00 to 2.50 to 3.oo to 5.00 to 4.00 to 3.00 to 4.00 to 5.00 to 3.00 to 5.00 to 10.00 to 3.00 to 5.00 to 3.00 to 5.00 to 10.00 to 5.00 to 5.00 to 2.50 to 5.00 to 5.00 to 3.00 to 4.00 to 3.00 to 4.00 to 5.00 to
200.00 60.00
150.00 75.00
100.00 50.00 40.00
100.00 120.00
35.00 90.00 140.00 60.00 50.00 45.00 70.00 150.00 55.00 30.00 55.00 200.00 45.00 60.00 600.00 45.00 40.00 150.00 50.00 100.00 80.00 100.00 100.o'"O 180.00 120.00 100.00 80.00 110.00 50.00 80.00
STA'l'IS'l'ICS, 1908-1909
31
Houston ----------Southern _______ From. Irwin -------------Southern _______ From Jackson -----------Northern _______ From Jasper ____________Middle _________ From.
Jeff Davis -------.--Southern _______ From Jefferson __________Middle _________From Jenkins ___________Middle _________ From Johnson ___________Middle _________ From Jones _____________Middle _________ From Laurens ___________Middle _________ From Lee _______________Southern _______From Liberty ___________Southern _______ From Lincoln ___________ Northern _______From Lowndes __________Southern _______ From Lumpkin __________Northern _______ From McDuffie __________Middle _________ From Mcintosh _________Southern _______ From Macon ____________Southern _______ From Madison __________Northern _______ From Marion ____________Southern _______ From
Meriwether ________Middle -'---------From Miller _____________Southern _______ From Milton ____________Northern _______ From Mitchell ___________Southern _______ From Monroe ___________Middle _________ From Montgomery ______Southern _______ From Morgan ___________Middle _________ From Murray ___________Northern. _______ From Muscogee _________ Southern _______ From Newton ___________Middle _________ From Oconee -----------~Northern _______li'rom Oglethorpe ________Northt~rn _______ From Paulding __________ Northern _______ From Pickens _________ .:._Northern _______ From
Pierce -----------~Southern _______ From Pike ______________ Middle _________ From Polk ______________ Northern _______ From
Pulaski -----------Southern _______ From Putnam ___________Middle _________ From
5.00 to 4.00 to 5.00 to 5.00 to 4.00 to 5.00 to 4.00 to 3.50 to 3.50 to 5.00 to 4.00 to 3.50 to 3.50 to 4.00 to 5.00 to 4.00 to 2.50 to 4.00 to 3.00 to 7.00 to 3.50 to 3.00 to 6.00 to 3.50 to 4.00 to 3.50 to 5.00 to 3.00 to 5.00 to 5.00 to 4.00 to 3.50 to 4.00 to 3.00 to 4.00 to 5.00 to 5.00 to 3.50 to 4.00 to
110.00 65.00
100.00 7Q.OO 60.00
110.00 80.00
105.00 50.00
100.00 50.00 60.00 6a.QO
175.00 55.00 70.00 30.00
125.0(, 75.00
160.00 75.00 75.00 35.00
100.00 100.00
50.00 100.00
40.00 200.00 110.00
95.00 60.00 70.00 30.00 75.00 150.00 90.00 110.00 115.00
32
GEoRGIA DEPARTMENT oF AGRICULTURE
Quitman ----------Southern _______ From Rabun ____________ Northern _______ From Randolph __________Southern _______ From Richmond _________Middle _________ From Rockdale __________ Northern _______From Schley __: __________ Southern _______ From
Screven -----------Southern _______ From Spalding _________ ....Middle _________ From Stephens __________ Northern _______ From
Stewart -----------Southern _______From Sumter __________ ....Southern _______From Talbot ____________Middle _________ From Taliaferro _________Middle _________ From
Tattnall ----------Southern _______ From Taylor ------------Southern _______From Telfair ------------Southern _______ From Terrell -----------Southern _______ From Thomas -----------Southern _______ From Tift ---- ----------Southern _______ From Toombs -- -----~--Southern _______ From Towns ___________ Northern _______ From Troup ___________ _,Middle _________ From
Turner ______ -----Southern _______ From Twiggs ___________ Middle _________ From Union ____________ Northern _______ From Upson ___________ ]1diddle _________ From Walker ___________ Northern _______ From Walton ___________ Northern _______ From \Vare _____________Southern _______ From Warren ___________Middle _________From W;;tshington _______Middle _________ From Wayne ___________ Southern _______ From Webster __________Southern _______ From White ___________ ....Northern _______ From Whitfield _________ Northern _______ From Wilcox __________ _,Southern _______ From Wilkes ___________ Northern _______ From
Wilkinson ________ Middle ----------From Worth ____________Southern _______ From
4.00 to. 40.00 3.00 to 20.00 5.00 to 150.00 5.00 to 350.00 4.00 to 80.00 3.00 to 40.00 4.00 to 45.00 5.00 to 150.00 5.00 to 100.00 5.00 to 110.00 5.00 to 100.00 3.50 to 50.00 5.00 to 75.00 4.00 to 90.00 5.00 to 70.00 3.00 to 60.00 4.00 to 125.00 5.00 to 225.00 4.00 to 110.00 4.00 to 75.00 3.00 to 25.00 4.00 to 225.00 4.00 to 75.00 3.00 to 50.00 3.00 to 10.00 3.50 to 60.00 3.50 to 45.00 5.00 to 110.00 4.00 to 130.00 4.00 to 75.00 4.00 to 145.00 3.50 to 65.00 4.00 to 40.00 4.00 to 30.00 4.00 to 125.00 5.00 to 45.00 5.00 to 110.00 3.50 to 35.00 4.00 to 55.00
STA'l'IS'l'ICS, 1908-1909
33
SOUTH'S LUMBER CUT.*
(Feet, Board Measure.)
States.
1880.
1900.
Alabama ........... . 251,851,000
1,096,539,000
Arkansas ........... . 172,503,000
1,595,933,000
Florida ............ . 247,627,000
788,905,000
Georgia ............ . 451,788,000
1,308,610,000
Kentucky .......... . 305,684,000
765,343,000
Louisiana .......... . 133,472,000
1,113,423,000
Maryland .......... . 123,336,000
183,393,000
Mississippi ......... . 168,747,000
1,202,334,000
North Carolina ..... . 241,822,000
1,278,399,000
South Carolina ..... . 185,772,000
466,109,000
Tennessee .......... . 302,673,000
939,463,000
Texas .............. . 328,968,000
1,230,904,000
Virginia .,, ,', ....... . 315,939,000
956,169,000
West Virginia ...... . 180,112,000
773,583,000
Total ........... 3,410,294,000 United States.... 18,087,356,000
13,699,107,000 34,780,513,000
1907. 1,224,967,000 1,988,504,000
839,058,000 853,697,000 912,908,000 2,972,119,000 213,786,000 2,094,485,000 1,622,387,000 649,058,000 894,968,000 2,229,590,000 1,412,477,000 1,395,979,000
19,303,983,000 40,256,154,000
SOUTH's' TIMBER RESOURCES.*
Figures of 1900.
Owned by Lumbermen.
Estimated
Wooded Area.
Merchantable
States.
Acreage.
Acreage. Timber-Feet.
Alabama 0 Arkansas ............
24,512,000 28,800,000
1,224,835 1,741,779
5,100, 700,000 7,917,800,000
Florida .............. 24,128,000
Georgia ...-........... 26,880,000
1,318,387 1,107,838
5,918,500,000 4,212,200,00,0
Kentucky ... 0. 14,208,000
382,649
1,787,200,000
Louisiana 0 ,
18,112,000
1,497,352
9,964,100,000
Maryland 0 0
2,816,000
66,928
250,100,000
Mississippi 0
20,672,000
1,214,458
9,242,700,000
North Carolina 0 22,592,000
1,714,135
6,488,400,000
South Carolina ....... 13,120,000
454,785
1,998,200,000
Tennessee 0
17,472,000
1,138,649
4,496,100,000
Texas ............... 40,960,000
Virginia ............ 14,976,000
1,671,308 402,360
9,906,300,000 1,712,900,000
West Virginia 0 ll,776,000
506,059
2,608,400,000
Total . . . . . . . . . . . 281,024,000
14,441,522
71,603,600,000
United States . . . 700,469,760
32,222,097 215,550,600,000
The estimated merchantable timber in this table by no means repre
sents the total which, according to different calculations, ranges from six
times to nine times as much.
*From The Manufacturers' Record, Baltimore, Md.
34
GEoRGIA DEPARTMENT o!<' AGRICULTURE
COMMERCE AT SOUTHERN PORTS.*
(Shown by the Values of Exports of Merchandise.)
Districts.
1880.
Alexandria, Va............. $ 42,180
Baltimore, Md............. . 76,253,566
Beaufort, S. C ............. . 1,952,644
Brunswick, Ga ............ . 966,582
Charleston, S. C ........... . 19,591,127
Fernandina, Fla . . . . . . . . . . . . 262,871
Georgetown, D. C.......... .
20,039
Georgetown, S. D .......... .
41,492
Newport News, Va ........ .
Norfolk and Portsmouth, Va. 14,065,455
PamJico, N. C ............. .
21,037
Richmond, Va............. . 2,326,915
St. Johns, Fla ............. .
88,115
St. Marys, Ga ............ .
66,151
Savannah, Ga............. . 23,992,364
Wilmington, N. C......... . 3,941,665
Apalachicola, Fla.......... .
7,474
Galveston, Texas ......... . 16,749,889
Key West, Fla ............ . 1,052,806
Mobile, Ala............... . 7,188,740
New Orleans, La .......... . 90,442,019
Pearl River, Miss ......... . 268,372
Pensacola, Fla ............ . 1,930,258
Sabine, Texas ............ .
St. Marks, Fla ............ .
5,062
Tampa, Fla............... .
Teche, La; .............,.. .
4,220
Brazos de Santiago, Texas .. 2,350,829
Corpus Christi, Texas ..... . 643,294
Paso del Norte, Texas ..... .
Saluria, Texas ............ . 630,587
1900. $. 0 0 0 0. 0 0 0 0
115,530,378 189,908
7,373,487 7,151,720 2,588,808
34,758,323 13,112,096
2,005
269,611 4,944
38,251,981 10,975,511
424,783 85,657,524
1,395,326 13,206,334 115,858,764
1,687,863 14,413,522
6,300 1,457,255
210,375 6,205,430 6,519,819 7,392,110
1908.
$
2,500
89,988,505
181,900
12,397,838
2,510,965
8,659,118
29,702 8,365,885 12,534,632
154,301 815,152
61,695,330 30,291,681
219,930 161,352,201
764,017 27,983,997 159,455,773
7,755,843 20,333,978 12,964,644
1,945,144 3,776,609
192,257 11,158,277 8,050,921
4,517,615
Total South ........... $264,905,753 $484,644,177 $648,098,715 All districts .......... $83~,638,658 $1,394,483,082 $1,860,773,346
*From The Manufacturers' Record, Baltimore, Md.
Statistical Matter
GEORGIA CF.OP BULLETIN.
<J:)
0'>
This Bulletin contains official information, carefully culled from United States reports and other reliable _!!Ources, concerning the crops of Georgia including the cotton acreage (harvested) and production by States for selected years from 1879 to 1907; also the production by States for the census years from 1839 to 1869 inclusive, there being no figures available for the acreage previous to 1879. It is to be
borne in mind that the crops of 1839 are the ones reported in the census of 184q, as those of 1849 are reported in 1850 and so on.
0
~
:>:!
0
> H
1908 1907 1906 1905
Acres
4,848,000 4,774,000 4,610,000 3,738,703
Table I.-GEORGIA'S COTTON CROP.
Bales
COTTON.
I I Gross Weight Net Weight
including
lbs.
llinters, lbs.
Value of Lint Cotton in Dollars.
2,026,999 ---
990,038,283
904,958,3941 $86,785,1411
1,901,576 927,894,382 867,549,349 $101,684,342
1,677,866 813,164,837 760,713,544 $78,002,224
1,759,083 857,539,615 804,088,192 ' 89,509,581
t;j
COTTON SEED.
Quantity Tons.
Value in ~ Dollars.
1
M .,;
>
.:>.:!;
Aggregate Value of- en-
tire Crop in
~
M z
..;
Dollars.
~
866,R28j
$15,082,8071' $10l,!lti7 ,IJ4!S ---
;l>
815,677
$15,106,338 $116,790,680
~
H
Q,
712,063
10,787,754
8~,789,973
c.r:.::;
804,088
13,267,452
102,777,033
c:::
:>:!
M
1904
4,227,188
1,992,757 958,340,683 901,465,937
80,236,163
901,466
11,719,058
91,955,221
1903 1902
4,048,912 3,863,542
1,327,596 1,499,862
644,864,954 724,535,972
605,779,632 671,307,677
74,906,266 57,900,477
605,780 681,308
9,837,8671 84,744,133 11,105,320 ' 69,005,797
Table 2.-The Sea-Island or Long Staple Cotton is included in all the items concerning lint cotton in Table 1. crop sepa~ately in Table 2.
SEA-ISLAND COTTON CROP OF GEORGIA.
We now give that
BALES
POUNDS
VALUE IN DOLLARS
BALES
POUNDS
VALuE IN DOLLARS.
. 1907
44,713
17,667,337
$4,287,863
1904
53,112
20,978,844
$3,985,980
1906 1905
25,.484 58,311
9,950,6341 23,511,064
$2,850,857 $4,114,436
1903 1902
37,612 S8,268
14,066,321 23,105,075
$2,953,927 Ul
~ $3,927,863 ....
'f)
--
-
------
----
---
--
--
---
-
--
-
~
The crop of 1908 reported for the commercial season of 1908-1909 is about 2,100,000 bales, approximatin/S in gross weight 1000,000,000 pounds, and on account of the increase in size of the crop, having an a,ggregate value of that of 1907, notwithstanding the lower average price of cotton byrthe pound.
()
!!'
.....
~
0
00
..1...
GEORGIA.
~
0
Table 2. (B)-COTTON CONDITION AUGUST 25, 1908.
~
Per Cent of U. S. Acreage in State.
Condition August 25.
1908
1907
1906
Condition July 25, 1908
Ten Year Average.
July 25.
August 25 September 25
15
77
81
72
85
81
76
71
1
The cotton receipts at the port of Savannah for the year ending August 31st were for 1905, 1,877,343 bales, for 1906, 1,514,943 ~
bales and in 1g07, 1,468,633 balt'!s.
"""!
Table 3.-QUANTITY OF SEA-ISLAND COTTON GINNED FROM THE CROPS OF 1903 TO 1907, BY COUNTIES.
~
00
FLORIDA.
TOTAL CROP (NUMBER OF BALES)-
NUMBER OF BALES GINNED TO DEC. 13-
COUNTY
I
--1 The State _______________
- 1907-
28,935
1906 23,995
1905
1904
---
41,531 39,619
1903
1907
---
27,840 22,490
1906 21,534
1905 34,432
1904 33,059
190.1 22,382
Q
M 0
Alachua ________________________ Baker__________________________
Bradford _____-________________ -Calhoun________________________ Columbia. ______________________
----
7,184 5,579
1,207
499
3,412 1,986
-------- -------2,661 2,260
8,796 1,153
3,959 197
3,889
8,656 1,145 4,605
. 76
3,290
6,860 6,133 5,254
711
773
421
3,320 2,780 1,833
191 -------- --------
1,973 2,179. 2,149
8,076
883 3,726
143
3,717
---
i:tl C)
8,201 862
6,140 506
>>-<
4,157 2,836 tj
52 3,196
116 1,656
M
">C
i:tl
Escambia ______________________ Gadsden _______________________
Hamilton ______________________ Holmes ________________________ Jackson ________________________
1 --------
3,062 --------
310
-------18
2,736
--------
252
-------156
2,820
6 726
-------137
2,665
109 622
-------172
1,485
6 459
------------.----
2,286 --------
189
--------
9 2,539
-------155
-------98
2,539 4
552
-------87
2,458
30 443
-- -- -- -
117 1,265
3 288
~
~
M z
~
@
Jefferson__ ______ -- __ -- ---- -- --
113
150
169
305
Lafayette ________ -- -- -- ---- -- --
688
727 1,055
739
LLeevoyn_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-
---- -- ---
215
-------.164
--------
569
--------
701
Madison ________________________ Marion _________________________ Nassau _________________________ Putnam ________________________
5,147
175
---------------
5,479 99
---------------
11,143 187 7
--------
10,647 --------
8 --------
. 368
83
100
155
234
280 >
553
560
681
971
676
306
5 -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
699
193
164
476
663
641
C) i:tl >-< (')
c::
I:'"'
7,071
4,003
4,612
6,982
6,589
4,801 c~::
78 -------- --------
75 --------
7 -------- -------- -------- --------
60 i:tl 7 M
16 -------- -------- -------- --------
16
Sumter_______ -~ ______________ -Suwanee _______________ -------Taylor _________________ -------Washington ____________________
8 30
4,230
-------3,717
-------5,925
-------4,822
--------
3,021
-- -3~g~~
-- -3~~
~ I~- -5~~~~
-- -4~~~~
-- --2~~g~
448
329
603 1,074
754
52 --------
171
18
91
4 1--------
104 1 18 1 65
GEORGIA.
The State _______________ -~ 44,713 25,484 58,311 53,112 37,612 33,117 21,171 46,367 43,738 28,100
*Appling_- ______________________ Berrien ________________________
Brooks_________________________ Bryan _____ --~-- ________________ tBllloch ________________________
2,437 1,203
6,217 3,853
849
450
36 --------
9,456 4,860
3,797 6,328
1,510 61
10,494
2,756 5,608 1,259
61
10,874
1,535 3,494 1,063
46 6,874
1,814
792
4,933 3,534
620
414
25 ---- ----
6,893 4,388
3,155 - 2,354
5,511 4,768
1,343 1,107
59
43
9,252 9,168
1,323 2,544
098 29
5,699
Charlton _-- ____________________ Chatham _____~- ________________ Clinch _______ :_ _________________ *Coffee __________________________
Colquitt________________________
--------
11 705
3,997 650
--------
4 304 2,400
196
--------
10 908 4,760 967
-------20
617 3,880 1,084
49
-------444
2,256 1,116
-------4
497
3,028 492
---------------
227
1,936 182
-------5
677
3,759 829
---------------
537 3,273
882
30
--------
265
1,698 844
Us: l
.>.C..l
{f)
tDecatur __________ -~ ____________ Dodge _________________________ Early __________________________
62 --------
9
--------
Echols _________________________ tOEmanuel ______________________
-------358 677
-------301 288
48
134
25 --------
3
1
483
413
437
935
275
42
8
191 -------- --------
30 -------- --------
266
249
289
1,178
443
194
43
70
156 .>..C..l
18 -------- --------
(') {f)
2
1
25
~
427 327
366 714
224 783
~ """'
0
00
tGrady _________________________ Irwin __________________________
*Jeff Davis- _____________________ tJenkins ________________________ Laurens ________________________
169
832 102
30
--------
20 539
68 3
--------
340 -------- --------
1,606 1,414 1,414
130 --------
581
326
278 -------- --------
102 -------- --------
97 17
61 2
18
7
18 -------- --------
290 -------- --------
....I....
~~
1,299 1,146 1,056 0
231 -------- -------- '-0
102 -------- --------
5
5
14
~~;~1e;~ ~= MMeiTtcnhteolsLh________==____==____==____=_=___=_=___=__=__=__=__=__=__=__=__=__=
OMontgomery ____________________
Pierce _________________________ tScreven ________________________
191
78
342
386
4,871 3,643 6,934 5,340
1 -------- -------- --------
927
40
843
823
48 -------- -------- --------
2,480 1,760 5,930 6,003
25 -------- -------- --------
268
119
59
255
293
194
4,208
3,830
3,377
5,349
4,832
3,423
14 875
------657
-------32
-------678
-------572
--------
635
62
20 -------- -------- --------
36
4,686 32
1,659
953 3,296 4,692 2,811
11 -------- -------- -------- --------
<:>:> '-0
QUANTITY OF. SEA-ISLAND COTTON GINNED FROM THE CROPS OF 1903 TO 1907, BY COUNTIES.
fl>.
0
GEORGIA-Continued.
I
TOTAL NUMBER OF BALES
. I
.
I NUMBER OF BALES GINNED TO DEC. 13
COUNTY
I I 1- I --------:------------ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
!.:_ - -190-7 - - -19-06-
1995 ----
~04 - 1 - 1 9 0 3 -
1-1907- 1-1906- 1-1905-
1904
19~
OTattnalL _______________ -- ____ -tThomas ________________________
6,090 362
3,838 36
7,506 696
7,934 551
4,785 895
4,512 279
3,1961 6,068
34
586
6,106 383
3,760 667
OToombs ________________ -- __ ----
324
101
548 -------- --------
166
57
390 -------- --------
0
t'i 0
~
0 >
Ware __________________________ Wayne_________________________
572 2,111
188 1,302
241 3,096
313 2,649
Wilcox_______________ ---- __ ---- -------- -------- -------- --------
Worth _________ ----------------
123 -------- --------
50
40
356
132
154
187
1,294 1,568
978 2,257 2,204
27 -------- -------- -------- --------
177
75 -------- --------
35
SOUTH CAROLINA.
25 tj
1,018 5
138
t'i
~
.~..;
~
zt'i
~
The State _____ ------------ 13,247 8,071 12,697 11,586 9,941 9,661
Beaufort _______________ -- __ ---BCehrakrelelsetyo_n_____________________-_-_-.-:-_-_-_-__-_-_-_Colleton______________ -- -- ____ --
1,914 45
10,958 330
1,089 18
6,826
138
2,469 65
9,975 188
1,324 33
10,092
137
1,174
857
106 --------
8,586 8,566
95
218
. - ---
y orgamzea trom parts ot- A. ppl--mg - - -
tJenkins county organized from parts of Bulloch, Burke, Emanuel and Screven.
tGrady county organized from parts of Decatur and Thomas.
OToombs county organized from parts of Emanuel, Montgomery and Tattnall.
6,656
687 15
5,857 97
10,037
1,551 40
8,314 132
8,931
631 6
8,165 129
8,123 ~
1,050 36
~
~ 1-<
7,000
()
c::
37 .r..;
c:
~
t'i
STATISTICS, 1908-1909
41
Cotton Acreage
AND
Production by States
Table 4.-COTTON ACREAGE (HARVESTED) AND PRODUCTION, BY STATES, FOR SELECTED YEARS.*
ft>.
1>:)
(Running bales, counting round as half bales and including linters.)
GROWTH YEAR.
United States
1907: BAaclreess _____________-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-
1906: ABacrleess _____-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-
1905: BAaclreess ________.____ _-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-
1904: Acres ______ -----------------Bales ______ ------------------
1903:. Acres ________________ -------Bales ________________________
1"9A02c:res ________________________
Bales ___ - __ -----------------1901:
Acres ____ -------------------Bales ________ ------~--------1900: Acres ______ -----------------Bales ________ ---------------1899: Acres_- ____ -----------------Bales ______ ------------------
31,311,000 11,325,882
31,374,000 13,305,265
26,117,153 10,725,602
30,053,739 13,697,310
28,016,893 10,015,721
27,114,103 10,784,473
27,220,414 9,748,546
25,758,139 10,245,602
24,275,101 9,507,786
Alabama.
3,439,000 1,133,285
3,658,000 1,263,674
3,500,168 1,249,685
3,611,731 1,471,170
3,608,049 1,000,735
3,501,614 977,045
3,642,964 1,123,764
3,403,746 1,038,392
3,202,135 1,095,329
Arkansas.
1,950,000 770,214
2,097,000 916,106
1,718,751 615,337
2,051,185 916,945
1,925,191 733,859
1,901,758 967,748
1,854,482 727,265
1,742,787 812,529
1,641,855 711,739
Florida.
265,000 57,736
283,000 62,830
256,173 80,180
267,372 89,002
268,666 59,317
253,961 68,217
254,596 57,_644
235,451 . 55,896
221,825 56,875
Georgia.
4,774,000 1,901,576
4,610,000 1,667,866
3,738,703 1,759,083
4,227,188 1,992,757
4,048,912 1,327,596
3,863,542 1,499,862
4,006,199 1,393,054
3,783,015 1,272,838
3,513,839 1,300,184
Louisiana. Mississippi.
1,622,000 679,782
0
~
0
3,220,000 1,478,689
!;.;
0
>>-<
1,739,000 979,270
1,561,774 523,871
1,745,865 1,107,271
3,408,000 tj
1,521,491 ~
3,051,265
'>"d
-><:~
1,198,568
8 ~
3,632,458 ~ z..
1,808,617 8
1,642,463
0
3,327,960 "!
836,334
~ 1,441,718
1,617,586
3,183,989 >-<
886,365
1,451,750
()
c:::
1,586,124
3,193,570
852,4481 . 1,280,307
~
c:::
f;i
1,480,781 720,088
3,194,795 1,061,973
1,376,254 713,929
2,897,920 1,257,772
189A8c:res_- ______________________ Bales ________________________
18A97c:re.s ________________________ Bales ________________________
18A96c:res ________________________
Bales __________ ---- ____ ------
1895: Acres ____ ---------- __ -------Bales_-----------------------
1894 Acres ____ -------------------Bales_-----------------------
18A93c:res ____________ -- ____ ------
Bales ___ --------------------1889
Acres __.__________ -- ____ ----~-
Bales ___ ---------------------
1884
Acres __ ----------------------
Bales ____ --------------------
18A79c:res __________________ ------
Bales __________________ ------
1869: OBales___________________
1859: 1849:
OBales_____________ -- ---OBales_____________ -- __ --
1839: OBales_____________ ------
24,967,295 11,189,205
24,319,584 10,897,857
23,273,209 8,532,705
20,184,808 7,161,094
23,687,950 9,901,251
19,525,000 7,493,000
20,175,270 7,472,511
17,439,612 5,682,000
14,480,019 5,755,359 3,011,996 5,387,052 2,469,093 2,063,915
3,003,176 1,176,042
2,709,460 1,112,681
2,656,333 833,789
2,371,726 663,916
2,664,861 900,439
2,316,000 810,000
2,761,165 915,210
2,740,941 648,700
2,330,086 699,654 429,482 989,955 564,429 305,8461
1,876,467 919,469
1,619,785 942,267
1,542,652 605,643
1,186,655 520,860
1,483,319 748,206
1,867,250 679,000
1,700578 691,494
1,259,858 531,400
1,042,976 608,256 247,968 367,393 65,344 15,741
152,452 35,064
251,109 53,657
264,325 48,730
191,540 38,722
201,621 50,729
165,000 55,000
227,370 57,928
268,111 57,300
245,595 54,997 39,789 65,153
I 4.5,131
31,620
I
3,535,205 1,378,731
3,537,702 1,350,781
3,468,335 1,299,340
3,069,323 1,067,377
3,610,968 1,247,952
3,050,000 1,000,000
3,345,104 1,191,846
2,958,930 807,400
2,617,138 814,441 473,934 701,840 499,091 426,6121
1,281,691 717,747
1,245,399 788,325
1,24,399 567,251
1,142,568 513,843
1,313,296 760,757
946,000 473,000
1,270,154 659,180
922,581 485,200
864,787 508,569 350,832 777,738 178,737 398,3171
2,900,298 1,247,128
2,778,610 1,524,771
2,835,316 1,201,000
2,487,119 1,013,358
U..., l
2,826,272 1,231,227
w.~.......,
.....
()
2,845,400 !fl
1,050,000 I-' ~
2,883,278
0 00
1,154,725
I
I-'
~
2,392,447
0 <:o
883,200.
2,106,215 963,111
564,938 1,202,507
484,292
504,965
""'1:1.)
COTTON ACREAGE (HARVESTED) AND PRODUCTION, BY STATES, FOR SELECTED YEARS.*
.........
[Running bales, counting round as half bales and incmding linters.]-
GROWTH YEAR.
1907: Acres ________________ -------Bales __________________ ------
1906: Acres __________________ -----Bales ________________________
19A05c:res ______________________ -Bales ________________________
190A4c:res ________________________ Bales ________________________
1903: Acres ________________ -------Bales ________________________
1902: Acres ________________ -------Bales ________________ --------
19A01c:res ________________________ Bales ________________ --------
1900: Acres __________ -------------Bales ________________ --------
1899 Acres ________________ -------Bales ______________ ----------
1898: Acres ________________ -------Bales ________________ --------
Missouri. t
71,000 40,751
91,000 57,476
66,444 44,205
79,403 53,394
68,52~
38,623
61,830 44,592
55,183
30~51
50,173 27,830
48,201 20,366
82,498 33,207
North Carolina.
1,408,000 652,930
1,374,000 626,642
1,085,568 664,934
1,306,968 758,846
1,155,028 563,694
1,075,743 576,670
1,112,260 4.56,363
1,091,034 513,677
1,007,020 477,070
1,311,708 629,620
I Oklahoma. South Carolina.
Tennessee.
2,196,000 870,238
2,426,000 1,186,672
749,000 277,114
1,981,000 893,062
2,389,000 931,726
814,000 304,054
1,234,822 675,562
2,161,923 1,129,426
757,397 278,364
1,315,663 811,552
2,531,875 1,208,180
881,341 329,627
1,029,357 464,412
2,318,100 829,777
783,196 251,016
1,017,090 538,352
2,205,016 961,822
754,600 319,244
837,673 374,627
2,248,569 741,233
737,337 205,287
709,006 349,355
2,195,252 787,231
662,612 225,350
682,743 212,010
2,074,081 881,192
623,137 215,668
530,799 316.864
2,353,213 1,035,414
896,,722 322,820
Texas.
Virginia.
9,156,000 2,267,293
8,894,000 4,066,472
6,945,501 2,490,128
8,355,491 3,132,503
7,801,578 2,454,616
7,640,531 2,475,881
7,656,312 2,491,394
7,178,915 3,368,310
6,960,367 2,556,413
6,991,904 3,363,109
35,000
0
l"i
9,602
0
~
0
36,000 >H
14,596 t:;l
38,664 16,259
l"i
">0
~
8
47,199 ~
17,446 zl"i
39,864 >-i
14,024
0 "1
> 36,843
16,925
0
~
35,1'45
qnH
14,309
r q 8
30,572 ~ 12,133 l"i
25,724 9,239
51,162 13,990
1897: Acres __________
----
__
--
__ ----
I
Bales ______________ -- ______ -- )
18i~~es-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -.Bales __________ --------------
189A5c:res _______________________ _
Bales ______________ -- ______ --
18A94c:res _______________________ _
Bales _____ ------ __ ----------1893:
Acres ______ -- __ -------------Bales ____________ ---- ____ ~---
1889: Acres ____________ ------------
Bales____ -------------------1884:
Acres _______________________ _ Bales ____________ --------_.:-187A9c:res _______________________ _
Bales ______ -----------------1869: OBales__________________ _ 1859: OBales__________________ _ 1849: OBales _________________ _
1839: OBales__________________ _
I. 83,7841 27,082
79,373 24,717
48,212 11,934
72,107 25,543
310,670 103,000
60,620 16,941
70,920 30,200
34,783 21,685
2,965 42,886
772 2,662
I
1,302,4371 646,726
1,228,714 521,795
1,050,183 397,752
1,296,522 479,441
1,180,000 400,000
1,147,136 336,261
1,061,048 404,100
893,153 389,598 144,935 145,514
73,845 135,578
1 534,656 1 317,561
219,674 122,956
238,940 82,771
262,890 135,566
w w
71,187 34,540
(t) (t)
35,000 17,000
1 2,074,778 1 1,030,085.
2,014,348 936,463
1,814,728 764,700
2,160,391 862,604
1,885,000 650,000
1,987,469 747,190
1,716,128 511,800
1,364,249 522,548 224,500 353,412 300,901 161,123
I
967,0771 268,635
912,337 236,781
712,763 172,560
879,954 304,981
805,920 276,000
747,471 190,579
815,678 313,800
722,562 330,621 181,842 296,464 194,532
72,327
I
7,164,1751 2,822,408)
6,758,6561 2,122,701
5,826,428 1,905,337
6,854,62i 3,140,392
4,153,760 1,997,000
3,934,525 1,471,242
3,186,668 995,400
2,178,435 805,284 350,628 431,463 58,072
50,612 12,878
47,747 11,539
44,623 7,964
61,128 13,414
w w
39,213 5,375
46,302 13,500
45,040 19,595
183 12,727 3,947 9,124
*Census statistics of acreage prior to 1879 are not available. The statistics of acreage and production for census years and for pro-
duction since 1898 are Census figures, while the others are as published by the United St~ttes Department of Agriculture.
tincludes statistics for other cotton producing localities not named; also for Oklahoma and Virginia for 1893, and for Oklahoma
in 1884.
tlncluded with Missouri.
OThe statistics of bales for 1849, 1859 and 1869 are in equivalent bales of 400 pounds each, as expressed in the Census reports for
those years; those for 1839 are in equivalent bales of 383 pounds net weight.
..,.
* Table 5.-PRODUCTION, CONSUMPTION, EXPORTS, AND IMPORTS OF COTTON FOR THE UNITED STATES: 1790 TO 1907
0>
PRODUCTION
Exports of
YEAR.
Running bales, counting round as
half bales (number).
Equivalent
500-pound bales, gross
weight
Average net
weight of bale. (lbs.)
Value of lint per pound, upland cotton
(cents).
Consumption domestic
(500-pound cotton (500-
bales).
pound bales).
Net imports (500-pound
bales).
0
~
>
(number).
tJ
1907-- -- ---- -- ---- -- -- -- -- -- -1906 __ -----------------------1905 __ - __ --------------------
1904 __ -----------------------1903--------------------------
11,325,882 13,305,265 10,725,602 13,697,310
10,015,721
11,375,461 13,595,498
10,804,556 13,679,954 10,045,615
480 490
11.5 10.0
-----------4,984,936
-----------8,825,237
-----------202,733
gl"'
482
10.9
4,877,465
6,975,494
133,464
478 480
8.7 12.2
4,523,208 3,980,567
9,119;614 6,290,245
130,182 is::
100,298 lz"'
>i
1902 __ -----------------------1901 __ ------------------------
1900 __ -----------------------1899-- -- -- ---- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -1898------ ---- -- -- -- -- ---- -- --
10,784,473 9,748,546
10,245,602
9,507,786 11,189,205
10,827,168 . 9,675,771
10,266,527
9,459,935 11,435,368
481
489 480 476
489
8.2
4,187,076
6,960,880
8.1
4,080,287
6,928,697
9.3
3,603,516
6,860,917
7.6
3,687,253
6,221,541
4.9
3,672,097
7,655,281
149,113 190,080
Iii
116,610 134,778
103,223
>~....
1897-- ---- -- -- -- -- -- -- ---- -- -1896 __ -----------------------1895 __ ------------------------
1894-------------------------1893 __ --------------------.----
10,897,857 8,532,705 7,161,094
9,901,251 7,493,000
10,985,040 8,515,640 7,146,772
10,025,534
7,433,056
482
477 477 484 474
5.6
3,472,398
7,839,467
7.3
2,841,394
6,126,185
8.2
2,499,731
4,761,505
5.9
2,983,665
6,961,372
7.5
2,300,276
5,307,295
105,802 (c':):
4 114,712
112,001 c:: 99,399 :I
59,405
11889912_____-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-____-_-_-_-_-_-_- ,
1890 __ ---------------- -~ -----1889------- ---- ---- -- -- -- -- -- -1888 __ -------------------------
6,700,365 9,035,379
8,652,597 7,472,511 6,938,290
6,658,313 8,940,867 8,562,089 7,472,511
6,923,775
475
8.4
2,415,875
4,485,251
85,735
473
7.3
2,846,753
5,896,800
64,394
473
8.6
2,604,491
5,850,219
45,580
478
11.5
2,518,408
4,928,921
18,334
477
10.7
2,309,2.50
4,730,192
15,284
-1881-------------------------1886 __ -------------- ---------1885 __ ---------- ------ -- -- ---1884 __ -------- -- ~- -- -- ---- ---1883 __ -------- -------- ---- __-__
1882__ ---- ---- -- ---- -- -+ -- ---1881 __ ------------ ---- ---- ---1880-------------------------1879-------------------------1878 __ -------- ---- -- -- -- -- ----
1877-- -------------- -- -- -- ---1876 __ -------- -- -- ---- -- -- ---1875 __ -- ~- -------------------1874 ____ ---------------------187:f__ ------ -- ---- -- -- -- _._ ----
1872 __ -----------------------1871 __ ------ -- -- ------ ---- -- -1870__ ---- ---- ---------------11886689-__-----~-------------------------------------------
1867------ -------- ---- -- -- -- -1866 __ ---- ---- ------ -- -- -- -- -1865 __ -- ------------ -- -- -- ---1864 __ -----------------------1863 __ ------------------------
1862 __ -------- ---- -- -- -- ---- -1861 __ ------------ ---- -- -- -- -1860 __ -----------------------1859------------ -- -- -- -- -- -- -1858 __ ------------------------
7,046,833 6,505,087 6,575,691 5,682,000 5,713,200
6,949,756 5,456,048 6,605,750 5,755,359 5,074,155
4,773,865 4,474,069 4,632,313 3,832,991 4,170,388
3,930,508 2,974,351 4,352,317 t3,011,996 2,366,467
2,519,554 2,097,254 2,269,316
300,000 450,000
1,600,000 4,500,000 3,849,469 t5,387,052 4,018,914
6,884,667 6,314,561 6,369,341 5,477,448 5,521,963
6,833,442 5,136,447 6,356,998 5,466,387 4,745,078
4,494,224 4,118,390 4,302,818 3,528,276 3,873,750
3,650,932 2,756,564 4,024,527 2,409,597 2,_198,141
2,345,610 1,948,077 2,093,658
299,372 449,059
1,596,653 4,490,586 3,841,416 4,309,642 3,758,273
467
10.3
2,205,302
4,519,254
11,983
464
10.3
2,049,687
4,301,542
7,552
463
9.4
2,094,682
4,200,647
8,270
460
10.5
1,687,108
3,730,170
7,144
462
10.6
1,813,865
3,733,369
11,247
470
10.6
2,038,400
4,591,331
4,716
450
12.2
1,849,457
3,376,521
3,261
460
11.3
1,865,922
4,453,495
5,447
454
12.0
1,500,688
3,742,752
7,578
447
10.8
1,457,266 . 3,290,167
5,049
450 440 444
11.3 11.7 13.0
1,458,667 1,314,489 1,255,712
3,197,439 2,839,418 3,037,650
;: 5,046 Ul
4,832 4,498
. ~ >-<
440
15.0
1,098,163
2,504,118
3,784
fJl ~
444
17.0
1,213,052
2,682,631
3,541
>-<
(')
~ffl
444
18.2
1,115,691
2,470,590
10,016
443
20.5
1,146, 730
1,824,937
6,374
~
<0
442
17.0
1,026,583
2,922,757
1,802 0
440
24.0
796,617
1,987,708
3,026
00
I
444
29.0
860,481
1,300,449
1,870
~
<0
0
445
24.9
844,044
1,502,756
345 <0
444
31.6
715,258
1,401,697
t1,035
441
43.2
614,540
1,301,146
10,322
477
83.4
344,278
17,789
68,798
477
101.5
219,540
. 23,988
52,405
477
67.2
287,397
22,770
67,695
477
31.3
369,226
10,129
61,731
477
13.0
841,975
615,032 ------------
461
11.0
845,lll0
3,535,373 ------------
447
12.1
867,489
2,'Z72,937 ------------ ~
~
* Tablel5.-PRODUCTION, CONSUMPTION, EXPORTS, AND IMPORTS OF COTTON FOR THE UNITED STATES: 1790 TO 1907
.....
00
PRODUCTION
Exports of
YEAR.
Running
Value of Consumption domestic Net imports
bales, count- Equivalent Average net lint per
(500-pound I cotton (500-, (500-P.ound
()
ing round as 500-pound weight of pound, up-
bales).
pound bales). bales).
~
half bales bales, gross
(number).
weight
bale. (lbs.)
land cotton (cents).
0
8
1&57 -------------------- -- ----
(num. ber). I
3,257,339
3,012,016
442
12.2
550,708
>
2,237,248 ------------
t:l
~
1188'5556 ____-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-__-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-
3,093,737 3,665,557
2,873,680 3,220,782
444 420
13.5 10.3
761,614 731,484
2,096,565 2,702,863
1,678 2,295
>"d
::0
1854 __ -------------- ------ ---1853 __ -------------------- ----
2,982,634 3,074,979
2,708,082 2,766,194
434
10.4
641,391
2,016,849
4,425 >-i
430
11.0
663,204
1,975,666
1,141
~
~
1852 __ ------------------------
3,416,214
3,130,338
438
11.0
736,468
2,223,141
1,423 >-i
1851 __ ------------------ ---- -'1850 __ ---- -------------- -- ----
3,126,310 2,454,442
2,799,290 2,136,083
428
9.5
617,468
2,186,461
416
12.1
422,626
1,854,474
512 330
0 "'1
1849---------- -------- ---- ---1848 __ ---------------- -- -- ---1847 __________________________ 1846 __________________________
1845 __ -------------- -- -- -- -- -1844 __ ------ -------- -- -------1843-- ------------ -- ---- ---- --
t2,46!l,093 2,866,938
2,439,786 1,778,651 2,100,537 2,394,503 2,030,409
1,975,274 2,615,031
2,128,433 1,603,763 1,806,110 2,078,910 1,750,060
429
12.3
575,506
1,270,763
436
7.5
586,032
2,053,204
485 22
>
417
8.0
537,427
1,628,549
558
H (')
431
11.2
385,916
1,054,440
'122 c::
411 415
7.9
363,365
1,095,116
5.6
337,730
1,745,812
~ 386
t680
412
7.7
298,872
1,327,267
517
::0
~
18412 ___-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-__-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-
--1 1840 __ ---------------- ---- ----
1839-- -------------- ---- -- -1838--------------------------
2,378,875 1,683,574 1,634,954 2,063,915
1,360,5321
2,035,481 1,398,282
1,347,640 1,653,722
1,092,Q80 1
409 397 394 383
3841
7.2 7.8 9.5 8.9
~3.41
278,196 222,461
245,045 236,525 221,738
1,584,594 1,169,434 1,060,408
1,487,882 827,248
1,835 107
1,210 297
319
1837---------------------- -- --
1,801,497
1,428,384
379
10.1
195,100
1,191,905
355
18365 ____-_-_-_-_-_-_-_--_-_-_-_-_-_-_-__-_-_-_-_-_-_-_1834 __________________________
1,423,930 1,360,725 1,253,406
1,129,016 1,061,821
962,343
379
13.2
176,449
888,423
i510
373
16.5
184,731
847,263
427
367
17.4
166,523
774,718
1,574
1833 __ ---------------------- --
1,225,895
930,962
363
12.9
149,159
769,436
308
\
1832 __________________________
1,114,286
815,900.
350
12.3
142,352
649,397
69
1831----------------------~---
1,069,444
805,439
360
9.4
130,895
644,430
i22
1882390_-_-_-_-_-_-_--__--_-_-_-_-_- _-_- _-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-
1,026,393 1,076,696
732,218 763,598
341
9.7
129,938
553,960
339
10.0
89,723
596,918
22 378
1828 __ -------------------- ----
953,079
. 679,916
341
9.9
84,788
529,674
i40
1827 __________________________ 1826 __________________________
11882245__-_-_-_-_--_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_1823 __________________________
1822 __________________________ 1821 __________________________ 1820 __________________________
1819 __ ---------------- -- -- -- --
1818-------------------~------
1811-------------------------1816 __ -~ ---------------- ---- -1815 __ -------------------- ----
1814--------------~-----------
1813 __ ---------------- ---- ----
805,970 1,057,402
817,308 751,748 656,028
704,698 636,042 575,540 632,576 446,429
465,950 439,716 369,004 254,545 304,878
564,854 732,218 533,473 4'49,791 387,029
439,331 376,569 334,728 349,372 261,506
271,967 259,414 209,205 146,444 156,904
335
10.3
84,516
421,181
331
9.3
103,535
588,620
312
12.2 ------------
409,071
286
18.6 ------------
352,900
597 74
79 26
;:(fl
.U::.:,;l
282
14.7 -- ---- -- -- --
286,739
932
1-< ()
Y'
298 283
11.4 -- -- -- ---- -14.3 -- ---- -- -- --
347,447 289,350
110
i196
1-'<:.:>
278
14.3
100,000
249,787
427 0
264 280
17.0 -----------24.0 ------------
255,720 175,994
t4,571
00
,!..
t4,454 <:.:>
0
279
34.0 ------------
184,942
3,086 <:.:>
282
26.0 ------------
171,299
2,048
271
29.0 ------------
163,894
t44
275
21.0
51,778
165,997
i266
246
15.5 ------------
35,458
101
1812__ ---------------- -- ---- -1811 __ ------------------ ---- -180190 ___-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-__-_-_-_-_-_-
1808 __ ------------------------
304,878 325,203 286,195
328,000 334,821
156,904 167,364 177,824 171,548
156,904
246
12.5 -.. ----------
38,220
3,133
246
10.5 -- -- -- -- -- --
57,775
897
297
15.5
35,565
124,116
431
250
16.0
33,473
186,523
i560
224
16.0 ------------
101,981
P,601
""'<:.:>
Table 5.-PRODUCTION, CONSUMPTION, EXPORTS, AND IMPORTS OF COTTONfFOR THE UNITED STATES:
Ot
0
1790 TO 1907.*
PRODUCTION
p
YEAR.
Exports of
~
Running Equivalent bales, count- 500-pound Average net
ing round as bales, gross weight of
Value of Consumption domestic Net imports
lint J.er (500-pound cotton (500- (500-pound
poun , up-
bales). pound bales). bales}..
~,.... >
half bales
weight
bale.
land cotton
t:l
(number). (number).
(lbs.)
(cents).
i'!
~
180067_- -_-_-_-_-_-_-__- -__- -__-_-_- _- _-_- _-_- _-_~ _-_-_-_-
1805 __ ------------ ---- -------1804__ ---------------- -- -----1803 __ -----------------------1802 __________________________
1801------------------~-------
1800 __ ------------------ ---- -1799 __ -----------------------1798--------------------------
289,855 285,714 304,348 261,044 222,222
231,092 210,526 153,509 88,889
66,667
167,364 167,364 146,444 135,983 125,523
115,063 100,418
73,222 41,841 31,381
276 280
230 249 270
19.0 ------------
21.5 22.0
-- -------- ------ --------
23.0
23,013
20.0 ------------
21,261
127,889 71,315
76,780 70,068
6,297 1,485
~
>-i ~
.. 961 456 183
zi'!
>-i
~
238 228
19.0 -----------19.0 ------------
75,424 47,768
t1,153
> tl70
228 225
44.0 28.0
18,829 16,737
41,822 35,580
8,696
8,870
225
44.0 ------------
19,065
7,532 (c:):
1797 __________________________ 11779956 ____-_-__- -__- -__- -__- -__-_- _-_- _-_- _-_- _-_-_____-_1794 ____ ----------------------
48,889 44,444
35,556
35,556
23,013 20,921
16,736 16,736
225 225
225 225
39.0 ------------
34.0 ------------
36.5 36.5
----
----------- ---- ----
18,720
7,57'7 12,213 9,414
7,761 c4::
7,336 8,737
f;i
8,592
1793 __ -------------- -- ---- -- --
1792__ ---------- -------- -- -- -17910 ___-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-__-_-_-_- _-_-_-_-
22,222 13,333 8,889 6,667
10,460
6,276 4,184
3,138
225
33.0 ------------
3,565
5,127
2222551
32.0 29.0
-----------------------
1,097 277
5,503 1,112
225
26.0
11,000
379
697
*Production~-The production statistics relate, when pc;>sidble, to the year of growth, but when figures for the growth year are wanting, a commercial crop which represents the trade movement is taken. The statistics of product,ion have been compiled from p~blications of the United States Department of Agriculture for 1790 to 1898. Census figures have, however, been used when available, including those for 1899 to 1907.
Value of lint.-The value of lint per pound shown since 1902 relates to the average grade of upland cotton marketed prior to April l of the following year; from 1890 to 1901, the average price of middling cotton on the New Orleans Cotton Exchange; and from 1790 to 1889, as published in reports of the United States Department of Agriculture.
Consumption.-Compiled from publications of the United States Department of .Agriculture for 17QO to 1894; from the reports of
Latham, Alexa-nder & Company, for 1895 to 1903. Census figures have been taken when available. Domestic Exports and net imports.-Compiled from American state papers for 1790 to 1819 and from "Commerce and Navigation
;'Ul
of the United States," Bureau of Statistics, Department of Commerce and Labor, for 1820 to 1905. The export year begins October 1
00
for 1790 to 1842, July 1 for 1843 to 1866, and September 1 for 1867 to 1906. The period for consumption, exports, and imports is desig .>..-..i
nated by the year in which the record begins rather than that in which it ends.
(")
Y'
tEquivalent bales of 400 pounds.
..,;...
<:0
tExcess of foreign exports over total imports.
0 00
...I ...
<:0
0
<:0
.C...i.t.
Table 6.-NUMBER OF ACTIVE GINNERIES, MACHINERY, AND CLASSIFICATION OF GTNNERIES ACCORDING
Ol i:\:l
TO KIND OF POWER USED AND NUMBER OF SAWS, BY STATES: 1906-7.
/
ITEM.
-
United Alabama. Arkansas. Florida. Georgia. Louisiana. Mississippi
States.
tActive ginneries ________________________ ~- ____ Gins ________________________________________ Saws________________________________________
Average number of saws per ginnery____________ Ginneries, classified according to power used:
StNeaum mb-er_________________________________
Gins ____________ -----------------------Saws___ - __________ ---- ____ -------------tWNautemrb-er_________________________________
Gins ____________________ -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -Saws____________________________________
AnNiummable-r_________________________________
Gins ________________ -------------------Saws________ ~- ____________ ---- ____ -- __ -GaNsuomlibneer-_________________________________ Gins ____________________________________ Saws ____________________________________
ElectricNumber_________________________________
Gins_----------------------------------Saws_______ _, __ -------- __ ---------------GiLnneessrieths,ancla5s0s_ii_j_ed__a_c_c_o_r_d_in__g_t_o__n_u_m__b_e_r_o_f_s_a_w__s:_ 50 but less than 75 _________________________
28,486 54,553 3,597,400
126
25,692 51,173 3,403,845
1,825 2,194 126,040
481 482 22,810
438 552 34,005
50 152 10,700
1,117 11,916
3,658 6,159 393,320
108
2,312 3,929
263,205 114 1--
-
178 233
14,505 81
4,529 8,228 518,275
114
2,076 3,524 237,475
114
2,996 5,380 349,500
456 546 31,170
116 116 5,200
88 113 7,180
2,203 3,815 257,230
66 67 3,515
34 34 1,690
9 13 770
2 -- -- -- -- -4 ----------
270 ----------
249 1,634
57 1,007
135 190 12,090
34 34 1,925
3 3 120
5 5 310
1 1 60
19 104
3,940 7,494
477,155
2,014 3,446 232,780
443 560 31,760
37 41
2,410
51 52 2,295
19 19 1,015
88
4
103
5
5,805-
350
7
2
19
13
1,260 - 920
297
22
1,957
938
()
3,780 ~
6,789
457,7~5
121
8
>
tj
l'i
3,478 ~
6,456
~
>-i
438,980 15::
157 171
zl'i
>-i
10,015 ~
122 122 6,110
6-
~
("'")
q
~ 18
21
1,330 ~
l'i
5 19
1,290
89 1,521
75 but less than 100-----------------------210000 bbuutt lleessss tthhaann 520000_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_500 and over_______________________________
tActive Ginneries _____________________________ Gins ________________________________________ .Saws ________________________________________ Average number of saws per ginnery____________ Ginneries, classified according to power used: StNeaummb-er__________- _______________________
Gins ____________ -----------------------Saws____________ -----------------------tWNautemrb-er_________________________________
SGainwss_________________________-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_----- -_-_-_-__-_------_-_
A nNiummable- r_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Gins ______________________ -------------Saws____________ ------------------------
GasolineNumber_________________________________ Gins ______________________ -------~-----Saws___________ - -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
ElNecutmribce-r_________________________ -- ____ --
Gins ____________ -----------------------Saws______ -----------------------------Ginneries, classified according to number of saws: Less than 50_____________________________
5750 bbuutt lleessss tthhaann 71050-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_100 but less than 200 _____________________
1,514 ,8,296 5,306
337
86 194 13,020 151
78 184 12,530
5 6 260
1 1 40
1 1 70
1 2
120
&24
1 23
254 1,115
364 42
2,792 3,648 223,815
80
218
20
747
28
266
7
17 ----------
939
3,169 220,130
234
3,078 4,700
299,985 97
179\ 1,417
633 46
1,7204241 84,085
120
2,422 3,236 200,775
927 3,141 218,190
237
8
258
15
14,415
990
49 ---------49 ---------2,155 ----------
76
2
80
5
4,640
350
8
2
25
8
1,830
600
201 ----------
1,838
27
135
5
498
239
2,663 4,206 279,870
635 1,172 80,240
278 313 17,995
27 32 1,785
27 27 1,175
37 37 1,880
93
3
104
3
6,355
180
17 ---------50 -- -- -- -- --
3,590 -- -- -- -- --
123
11
1,873
301
112
50
686
212
161\ 701 241
13
4,232 12,599 864,465
204
319 1,266
551 34
124 137 7,395
60
4,100 12,340 847,450
70 144 9,460
21 21 1,090
36 83 5,705
101 113 6,055
;:ff)
8
H (f)
8
7
H ()
7 Y'
340 1-'
"' 1
0 00
1
I
1-'
40 "0 '
15 "'
16
960
5 ----------
11 ----------
760 ----------
10 619
56 1,351
34
73
4
<:n
13
C;:i
Table 6.-NUMBER OF ACTIVE GINNERIES, MACHINERY, AND CLASSIFICATION OF GINNERIES .lCCORDING
01
"""
TO KIND OF POWER USED AND NUMBER OF SAWS, BY STATES: 1906-7.
ITEM.
*Missouri
I North
I
I
Oklahoma South
I Tennessee
Texas
Virginia
Carolina
Carolina
;?
0
200 but less than 500 _____________________
33
500 and over_____ ---- ______ .:~.--_,_________ ----------
117 3
640 28
270 14
125 3
2,059 137
--------
-- -----
----
>~.....
t1
t:zl
*Includes establishments distributed as follows: Kansas, 1; Kentucky, 3; Missouri, 81; and New Mexico, 1.
~
tDoes not include 223 establishments engaged exclusively in ginning sea-island cotton, which do not use saws.
...;
a::
tlncludes 39 establishments which use both water and steam, and 1 which uses both water and gasoline.-
~
...;
~
>
c(:): c~::
i:<j
t:zl
STATISTICS, 1908-1909
55
Number of Ginneries
56
GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
STATE.
I NUMBER OF GINNERIES.
Growth year.
Total.
Active.
Idle.
Average
number of bales ginned
per active establish-
ment.
United States __ 1907
30,822 27,592 3,230
4C
1906
31,325 28,709 2,616
41i 7
1905
31,441 29,038 2,403
36 6
1904
32,855 30,337 2,518
44 8
1903
32,705 30,218 2,487
33 8
1902
32,753 30,948 1,805
35 8
Alabama ________ I 1907
3,857 3,460
397
32 4
1906
3,984 3,658
326
34 3
1905
4,020 3,736
284
33 3
1904
4,239 3,912
327
37 4
1903
4,210 3,876
334
26 4
1902
4,276 3,977
299
21i 4
Arkansas ________ 1907
2,381 2,115
266
3/i 7
1906
2,487 2,312
175
38 9
1905
2,521 2,306
215
26 0
1904
2,631 2,451
180
36 8
1903
2,698 2,534
164
29 3
1902
2,650 2,538
112
39 4
Florida _________ 1907
304
259
45
21 9
1906
309
276
33
22 3
1905
311
292
19
27 0
1904
311
279
32
31 4
1903
308
273
35
21 5
1902
319
297
22
22 7
Georgia _________ 1907
5,106 4,567
539
4C 8
1906
5,135 4,586
549
3/i 7
1905
5,185 4,779
406
36 2
1904
5,465 4,980
485
39 5
1903
5,496 4,996
500
2E 6
1902
5,517 5,173
344
29 2
Kansas, Kentucky
and New Mexico_ 1907
8
7
1
33 0
1906 1905
5
5 --------
38 4
7
4
3
3E 8
1904
7
6
1
3~ 3
1903
5
4
1
18 0
1902
5
4
1
3E 8
Louisiana _______ 1907
2,125 1,874
251
3 4
1906
2,225 ' 2,076
149
47 1
1905
2,254 2,079
175
21: 2
1904
2,396 2,240
156
4~ 5
1903
2,359 2,208
151
38 9
1902
2,338 2,241
97
4( 7
Mississippi__ _____ 1907
3,987 3,541
446
4( 8
1906
4,152 3,780
372
39 3
STATISTICS, 1908-1909
57
STATE.
Growth year.
1905 1904 1903 1902
NUMBER OF GINNERIES. Average. number of bales ginned
per active Total. Active. Idle. j establish-
ment.
4,215 3,885
330
301
4,442 4,084
358
435
4,542 4,231
311
340
4,570 4,379
191
331
Missouri_ ________
1907 1906 1905 1904 1903 1902
94
76
18
449
91
81
10
639
84
78
6
517
92
76
16
651
83
75
8
524
80
69
11
718
North Carolina___ 1907
3,039 2,754
285
232
1906
3,039 2,792
247
219
1905
3,044 2,834
210
230
1904
3,183 2,947
236
254
1903
3,020 2,738
282
203
1902
2,985 2,760
225
206
Oklahoma _______
1907 1906 1905 1904 1903 1902
1,051
971
987
939
891
848
848
809
754
725
690
683
80
897
48
950
43
809
39
1,017
29
714
7
919
South Carolina ___ 1907
3,437 3,192
245
365
1906
3,394 3,146
248
290
1905
3,392 3,170
222
351
1904
3,453 3,247
206
367
1903
3,421 3,199
222
255
1902
3,464 l3,280
184
289
Tennessee _______ 1907
784
673
111
396
1906
833
702
131
417
1905
847
734
113
367
1904
894
762
132
421
1903
904
795
109
315
1902
901
833
68
394
Texas___ -- __ ---- 1907
4,501 3,995
506
563
1906
4,532 4,232
300
952
1905
4,523 4,165
358
604
1904
4,753 4,416
337
711
1903
4,775 4,443
332
577
1902
4,833 4,599
234
563
\'ir,:mtu __ -- _____ 1907
148
108
40
89
1906
152
124
28
118
1905
147
128
19
122
1904
141
128
13
135
1903
130
121
9
113
1902
125
115
10
144
Table 7.-TOTAL NET WEIGHT AND ESTIMATED VALUE OF UPLAND AND SEA-ISLAND COTTON AND QUANTITY AND VALUE OF COTTONSEED, BY STATES: 1902 TO 1907.
STATE.
Growth Aggregate value year. of cotton crop.
Total value.
COTTON. Upland.
Quantity (pounds).
Value.
United States ____________________ -'- _____ Alabama ____________________________________ Arkansas ____________________________________ Florida______ ------ __ ------------------------
1907 1906 1905 1904 1903 1902
1907 1906 1905 1904 1903 1902
1907 1906 1905 1904 1903 HI02
1907 1906
$700,956,011 721,647,237 632,298,332 652,031,636 660,549,230 501,897,135
69,785,579 68,132,907 73,499,641 68,781,860 64,901,842 44,615,918
47,888,048 50,693,030 36,870,676 45,175,356 49,299,610
45,689,~93
4,658,454 4,833,766
$613,630,436 640,311,538 556,833,817 561,100,386 576,499,824 421,687,941
60,967,625 60,425,564 64,819,516 59,954,793 57,392,656 37,523,134
42,501,929 45,144,235 32,424,856 38,581,704 42,798,835 38,132,539
4,148,231 4,377,039
5,279, 787,030 6,332,401,472 5,016,631,224 6,3B6,56Q,564 4,688,816,400 5,052,277,225
532,003,709 603,651,989 592,500,147 692,318,628 471,979,076 457,599,195
370,871,979 450,991,361 296,388,081 445,516,217 351,964,105 465,030,957
13,083,265' 17,876,133
$605,063,592 633,873,387 548,819,456 563,076,145 570,160,074 414,286,733
60,967,625 60,425,564 64,819,516 59,954,793 57,392,656 37,523,134
42,501,929 45,144,235
32~424,856
38,581,704 42,798,835 38,132,539
1,499,342 1,789,401
1905 1904 1903 1902
Georgia _____________________ ---------------- I
1907
1906 1905 1904
1903 1902
Kansas, Kentucky:and)New Mexico ____ -------- I
1907 1906
1905 1904
1903 1902
Louisiana ___________________________________ I
1907
1906 1905 1904
1903 1902
Mississippi__ _____________________ ------------ I
1907 1906
1905 1904 1903 1902
MissourL ____________________ -- ______ ------ -- I 1907
1906 1905
5,187,225 5,444,924 4,653,204 4,21l,Q57
116,790,680 88,789,978
102,777,033 91,955,221 84,744,133 69,005,797
170,127 121,796 84,359 98,036
51,836 58,693
41,874,055 52,818,373 30,806,017 52,409,183 55,448,886 40,366,447
90,604,269 81,786,032 71,641,190 87,918,263 96,240,594 66,751,272
2,232,722 2,926,998 2,547,477
4,656,617 4,949,169 4,243,339 3,722,852
101,684,342 78,002,224 89,509,581 80,236,163 74,906,266 57,900,477
150,788 109,357
74,214 83,724 45,002 49,853
37,068,375 47,369,553. 26,875,425 45,147,070 48,048,064 34,660,199
80,494,766 73,348,874 62,750,576 74,512,842 83,395,260 56,662,570
1,990,757 2,606,613 2,240,307
17,481,9091 22,945,210 14,882,622 16,558,362
849,882,012 750,762,910 780,577,188 880,487,093 591,713,311 658,202,602
1,315,774 1,092,474
678,375 966,783 370,086 607,972
323,458,773 473,222,310 245,662,019 521,328,755 395,132,107 422,685,357
702,397,613 732,755,978 573,588,449 860,425,423 685,816,285 691,006,945
17,371,356 26,040,093 20,478,125
1,912,521 1,987,055
1,809,727 1,357,786
97,396,479 75,151,367 85,395,145 76,250,183
71,!T52,339 53,972,614
150,788 109,357
(/)
~
74,214
8
>-<
83,724 45,002
00
8>-<
()
49,853 Y'
37,068,375
1--' <.0
47,369,553 0
26,875,425
00
I
45,147,070
1--' <.0
48,048,064
0
<.0
34,660,199
80,494,766 73,348,874 62,750,576 74,512,842
83,395,260 56,662,570
1,990,757
2,606,613-
2,240,307
Ot <.0
m
Table 7.-TOTAL NET WEIGHT AND ESTIMATED VALUE OF UPLAND AND SEA-ISLAND COTTON AND QUANTITY
0
AND VALUE OF COTTONSEED, BY STATES: 1902 TO 1907.
STATE.
I Growth Aggregate value
year.
of cotton crop
Total value.
1904 1903 1902
North Carolina-------------------------------1 Oklahoma ___________________________________ j
1907 1906 1905 1904 1903 1902
1907
1906 1905 1904 1903 1902
f' outh Carolina __ ----~--- __ ---- ______ ---- _____ I
1907
1906 1905 1904 1903 1902
2,502,952 2,544.0.'>0 1,986,946
38,663,740 32,650,649 37,314,373 34,058,487 35,374,801 26,020,846
53,969,030 48,338,669 39,312,536 38,173,434 31,177,27.'> 25,840,039
72,657,817 49,888,619 6.'>,863,633 56,433,286 53,19.'>,302' 44,SS1,6S61
2,138,671 2,208,579 1,669,361
33,075,857 27,649,172 32,295,820 29,044,466 30,659,839 21,509,166
47,313,727 43,047,572 35,494,940 33,346,638 27,165,065 21,530,901
62,321,155 42,579,831 56,984,989 48,317,466 46,255,893
,992,6.'>2
COTTON.
Upland.
Quantity (pounc!s).
24,695,974 18,162,659 20,358,061
288,620,047 276,215,506 295,208,595 335,386,447 252,136,834 262,306,907
4 1 2 , 8 5 9 , 7 43 430,045,670 324,451,002 385,065,107 223,396,911 262,571,967
529,590,430 415,386,362 510,321,386 545,511,764 372,563,172 437,614,307
0
~
0
Value.
i:tl
> 0
tj
~
">0
i:tl >-i
is:
~ z
>-i
g
>
~
()
c::
ct:i:
i:tl
~
35,884,373
Tennessee __ -----------------~--------------- I
1907 1906
1905
1904
1903
1902
Texas- ________ --_-- __ ----------------------
1907 1906 1905 1904
1903 1902
Virginia __ ------ __ -- ____ -------- ______ -- _____
1907
1906 1905 1904
1903 1902
16,996,2861 16,338,825 16,634,965 16,132,779 16,648,953 14,644,721
144,075,730 223,546,247 148,874,464 152,163,661 165,393,830 117,417,678
589,474 781,348 884,743 784,194 874,914 736,772
15,099,861 14,671,600 14,593,945 13,650,217 14,513,453 12,476,541
126,308,7 42 200,318,247 133,334,968 130,469,039 144,109,272
98,247,438
504,281 661,657 778,063 668,424 758,301 610,258
131,761,443 146,569,434 133,399,866 157,623,751 119,354,054 152,152,934
1,102,170,525 2,001,181,289 1,218, 783,987 1,506,570,885 1,185,109,149 1,198,139,484
4,400,361 6,609,963 7,112,095 7,718,527 6,236,029 7,442,175
15,099,861 14,671,60(}
14,593,945 13,650,217
14,513,453 12,476,541
126,308,7 42
200,318,247
133,334,968
130,469,039
144,109,272
98,247,438 Ul
504,281 661,657
>>-i
.>...-.i
(J)
778,063 .>..-..i
668,424 758,301
(")
!fl
610,258 ~
'0"'
00 I
!-'
'0"' '"'
Table 8.-TOTAL NET WEIGHT AND ESTIMATED VALUE OF UPLAND AND SEA-ISLAND COTTON AND QUANTITY AND VALUE OF COTTONSEBD, BY STATES: 1902 TO 1907.
STATE
Growth year.
COTTON.
I
Sea-Island.
Quantity (pounds).
Value.
COTTONSEED.
I
Quantity (tons).
Value.
United States ____ -------- __ -- __ ---------
1907 1906
1905 1904 1903 1902
33,161,786 21,706,389
43,573,904 40,137,264 27,774,971
39,363,523
$8,566,844 6,438,151 8,014,361 8,024,241
6,339,750 7,401,208
-- Alabama ______________ -- __ ------------------
1907 1906
---
--
--
----
-- --
----
----
----
----
-------- -- -------------------
1905 1904
-- --------------- --
---
-- -----
--------
--------- ---- --
---
---
1903 1902
--------------------------------
----------------------------
--
--
Arkansas ______________ ---------------------- 1907 ---- ---- -- -- -- -- -- ---- ---- ------
1906 1905
--------------------------------
---- ---- -- -- -- ------- -- ---- ----
1904 1903 1902
------------------
-----
-----
--
--
--
-- --
----- --
-----------
------------------------------
------
----- Florida___ ---,-- ______ ----------
-- 1907
10,914,253
2,648,889
4,952,402 5,912,646 5,060,205 6,426,698 4,716,591 5,091,641
. 494,003 560;534 592,500 692,319 471,979 457,599
344,381 418,777 296,388 445,516 351,964 465,031
28,520
$87,?25,575 81,335,699 75,464,515 90,931,250 84,04_9,406 80,209,194
8,817,954 7,707,343 8,680,125 8,827,067 7;509,186 7,092,784
5,386,119
5,548,7~5
4,445,820 6,593,652 6,500,775 7,556,754
510,223
1906 1905 1904 1903 1902
Georgia-------------------------------------- I
1907 1906 1905
1904 1903
1902
Kansas, Kentucky, and New Mexico __ ------ ____ - I 1907
1906 1905 1904 1903 1902
Louisiana ____________________________________ I 1907
1906 1905 1904 1903
- 1902
Mississippi ______ -- ---- ---- ------------------- I 1907
1906 1905 1904 1903 1902
Missouri -- _-- __ ---- ______ ---- __ -- __ ---- __ -- -- I 1907
1906
9,031,896 15,680,548 15,190,326 10,355,794 11,825,332
2,587,638 2,744,096 2,962,114
2,433,612 2,365,066
17,667,337 9,950,634 23,511,064 20,978,844
14,066,321 23,105,075
4,287,863 2,850,857 4,114,436
3,985,980 2,953,927 3,927,863
------------------------
------- ----
----
-- --- --
-- -- ------ -- -- ---------------------------------
----
-- --
----
----
--
--
----
--
--
--
--
-- -- -------- -------- ---- ---- ----
-- -- ---- -- -- -- -- ----------------
------------
--
--
--
--
---
----
----
--
--
--
--
--------
----
---
---
----
-------------------------------
--------------------------------
----
----
-----------
--
--
----
----
---
----------------
--
--
--
--
--
--
-- ---- -- -- -- -- --
-- ---- -- -- -- ----
----
----
------------- -- -- --
----
-- ---------------
------
---
--
-----
-----
--
--
--
---- ---- ---- ----
---- ----------------- ----- ----
--------------------------------
-- -- -- ---- -- -- -- ------ -- -- -- -- ----------------- ----------------
30,147 33,163 38,136 25,238 28,384
815,677 712,063 804,088 901,466 605,780 681,308
1,222 1,014
678 967 370 608
300,355 439,421 245,662 521,329 395,132 422,685
652,226 680,416 573,588 860,425 685,816 691,007
16,131 24,180
456,727 530,608 495,755
409,865 488,205
15,106,338
10,787,754
13,267,452
11,719,058
9,837,867
11,105,320
19,339 12,439
10,145 14,312
r....n, .>.., V...........l.,
6,834 8,840
()
Y'
f.-"
-4,805,680
(0
0
5,448,820 00
3,930,592
I
f.-"
7,262,113
(0
0
7,400,822 (0
5,706,248
10,109,503 8,437,158 8,890,614
13,405;421 12,845,334
10,088,702
241,965 320,385 C'.l
~
..Table 8.-TOTAL NET WEIGHT AND ESTIMATED VALUE .OF UPLAND AND SEA-ISLAND COTTON AND QUANTITY
,
AND VALUE OF COTTONSEED, BY STATES: 1902 TO 1907.
0':> H'-
COTTON.
COTTONSEED.
STATE.
Growth year.
Sea-Island.
I Quantity (pounds).
Value.
1905 1904
1903
------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------- ---- -- -- ------
1902 -- -- -- ---- -- -- -- ---- -- ------ ----
North Carolina_______________________________
1907 1906
1905 1904
1903
------------------------------------------ ------
--------------------------------
-- -- -- ---- ------------------------------------- -- -- -- ---- -- --
----------------
1902 ---------------- ---- -- ---- ---- --
Oklahoma _____ ------------ __ ---- __ ---------South Carolina ____________ ---- __________ ----_
1907 1906 1905 1904 1903 1902
1907 1906 1905. 1904 1903
---- ---- -- -- -- --
----
-- -------------
---- --- ----
--
--
--------
----
-- --
----
--------
----------------
-- ------ -- -- -- -- ----------------
-------------------------------- --------------------------------
4,580,196
2,723,859 4,382,292
3,968,094 3,352,856
1,630,092 999,656
1,155,829
1,076,147 952,2U
Quantity (tons)
20,478 24,696 18,163 20,358
268,004 256,486 295,209 335,386 252,137 262,307
383,370 399,328 324,451 385,065 223,397 262,572
498,633 389,802 514,704 549,480 375,916
p
Value.
~
~
0....
>
307,170 t1
364,281 335,471
M
>"CC
317,585 ~
:::::
5,587,883 5,001,477 5,018,553
~ z
..;
5,014,021 g
4,714,962
> 4,511,680
0
6,655,303 el
5,291,097 (c):
3,817,596 4,826,796 4,012,210
~
4,309,138 M
10,336,662 7,308,788
8,878,644 8,115,820
6;939,409
Tennessee----------------------------------Te:tas___ -- -- -- ------ ---- -- ---- -- -- -- -- -- -- -Virginia __________ -- ____ ---------------------
1902
1907 1906 1905 1904 1903 1902
1907 1906 1905 1904 1903 1902
1907 1906 1905 1904 1903 1902
4,433,116
1,108,279
---------------- ---------- -r ----
---------------- -- -- -- -- -- -- ----
---------------- ------------------------------- ----------------
---------------- ----------------
---------------- ----------------
---------------- ---- -- -- -- -- -- --
---------------- ----------------
---------------- ----------------
---------------- ------------------------------- ---------I---------------------- ----------------
---------------- ------------------------------- ----------------
-- -- ---- -- -- -- -- ----------------
---------------- ------------------------------- ------------------------------- ----------------
442,047
122,350 136,100 133,400 157,624 119,354 152,153
1,023,444 1,858,240 1,218,784 1,506,571 1,185,109 1,198,140
4,086 6,138 7,112 7,718 6,236 7,442
7,559,004
1,89}.425 1,66 ,225 2,041,020
2,482,562 2,135,500 2,168,180
17,766,988
23,228,000
;: 15,539,496
21,694,622
r.n
21,284,558 ...,
19,170,240 w........,
85,193
.....
()
119,691 ~w
106,680 115,770
......
<.0
116,613 0
126,514
00
I
l-'
<.0
0
<.0
0'> <:;!
Table 9.-QUANTITY OF COTTON, EXCLUSIVE OF LINTERS, GINNED FROM THE CROPS OF 1903 TO 1907,
~
BY COUNTIEs-Continued.
~
GEORGIA.
COUNTY.
TOTAL NUMBER OF BALES GINNED (COUNT-
ING ROUND AS HALF BALES)-
I I I 1907
1906
1905
1904
1903
NUMBER OF EQUIVALENT 500-POUND BALEs-
0
.tTl
0
1907
1906
1905
.~...
The State _____ -- __ -- ________ 1,860,3231 1,632,7031 1,725,2721 1,962,890 1,305,844 1,815,834 1,592,572 1;682,555 >
*Appling __________________________ Baker____________________________ Baldwin__________ ---- ____________ Banks ___________________________ Bartow ___: ______________________
tBen Hill _________________________ :j:Berrien __________________________ Bibb _____________________________ Brooks___________________________ Bryan _________ -,- ________________
OBulloch __________________________ OBurke ____________________________
Butts ________________ ------ ____ -Calhoun __________________________ Camden __________________________
I
3,358 6,497 12,016 12,713 18,397
5,232 10,855 9,887 8,891
1,180
19,084 38,211 14,731 14,052
4
2,151
5,807 10,239
9,677 17,747
4,323
7,057 11,790
9,563 - 18,612
5,049
7,745 13,290 10,248 23,550
2,498 5,182
9,527 6,546 13,483
4,327 -- -- -- -- -- ---------- -- -- -- -- --
11,187
10,442
14,919
6,479
9,983
f$,795
11,990
8,087
11,311
11,376
14,361
7,541
1,568
1,611
1,739
737
17,195 31,197 12,437 10,130
6
18,186
22,930
11,123
38,610
51,713
32,916
13,662
16,498
11,728
13,134
16,882
12,649
22 ---------- ----------
2,901 6,543 12,033 11,241 17,669
5,010 9,283 9,768 8,583 1,055
16,960 39,946 14,822 14,341
3
t;l
1,707 5,586 10,255
3,ll37 6,916
11,884
.tTl '"tl
~
8,653
8,702 :;::
17,491
18,314 ..zt.T.,l
4,184 -- -- -- -- --
9,794 9,859
8,793 8,918
~
11,216 1,388
>- 11,053 1,397 0 .i:.<..j
15,375 31,746 12,514
10,168
15,879
()
c::
38,456 13,799
ti
c::
13,187 i:<j
5
19 .tTl
CampbelL ________________________ Carroll ___________________________
Catoosa ______________ ------ ____ -Charlton _________________________ Chatham _________________________
12,302.
12,199
31,282
30,821
1,436
1,188
75 ----------
1441
156
12,873
12,795
8,739
33,644
34,117
21,360
636
794
224
60 -- -- -- -- --
49
96
290 ----------
12,100
12,140
28,955
29,255
1,236
1,131
56. ----------
130
144
12,3{)7 31,491
576 55 87
Chattahoochee ____________________ Chattooga.____________________ -- -Cherokee _____________ -- ______ ---Clarke ___________________________
Clay _____________________________
6,137 9,460
9,899 14,694
11,781
6,343 9,087
9,553 8,547
~,428
5,890 9,226
9,919
7,651 9,973
6,914 10,027 11,815 8,967 13,633
4,671 6,482
6,923
8,716 9,102
6,013 8,989 8;561 14,168 11,899
6,2881 7,724 8,449 8,253 8,546
5,831 8,377 8,510 7,345 9,973
Clayton __________________________
Clinch ___________________________ Cobb ____________________________
*Coffee________ ~- __________________ Colquitt__________________________
12,885 934
16,964 6,533 7,128
10,683 624
15,518
6,369 7,226
10,870 1,130
15,062 6,956 5,830
11,866 1,010
18,281 7,745 7,653
8,240 548
11,618 3,419 4,220
12,614 737
15,040 5,439 6,653
10,598 518
14,007 5,366 6,941
10,653 925
13,947 5,860 5,487
Columbia_____________________ ---Coweta __________________________ Crawford _____________________ ---5Crisp ____________________________ Dawson _________________________ -
6Decatur __________.________________ DeKalb __________________________
5~D~goiy ~= ~ Dougherty=_=_=_=__==__==__=_=_=_= -==--==--=-= =__= ---==-
Douglas ______________________ ---Early ____________________________ Echols ___________________________ Effingham ____________________ ---Elbert ___________________________
16,765 29,359
7,004 13,922
1,834
7,798 10,474 21,632 25,941 14,289
9,350 14,844
358 2,139 20,871
12,777 30,777
6,088 11,127
1,602
9,629 8,995 19,113 23,530 12,750
8,314 12,999
301 1,633 17,506
14,300
13,627
10,608
31,852
32,831
22,244
6,165
8,441
6,480
10,781 ---------- ----------
1,538
1,687
930
10,847
8,990 18,453
21,865 14,360
17,738 11,161 20,750 39,125 19,426
11,014
5,970 14,290 25,114 13,099
8,993 15,463
483
2,052 18,377
9,140 16,640
413
2,156 22,620
6,281
11,337 266
990 16,694
16,785 29,459
7,038 13,922
1,583
11,752 31,183
6,129
11,183 1,416
7,748 9,483 22,091 26,394 14,346
9,410 8,344 19,579 23,935 12,041
8,432
7,654
15,663
13,594
284
240
2,011
1,548
- _18, 788 ______!_i>,920
14,586 32,999
(fJ.
> 8
6,239 8.....
10,975 1,363
(fl
8.....
()
Y'
10,617 8,397
1-' <0
18,743
0 00
22,259 13,929
I
H.. <0
0
'-0
8,166
15,740
420
1,995
_16,392
*Jeff Davis county organized from parts of Appling and Coffee.
5 Crisp cour1ty organized from part of Dooly.
tBen Hill county organized from parts of Irwin and Wilcox.
6 Grady county organized from parts of Decatur and Thomas.
tTift county organized from parts of Berrien, Irwin and Worth.
7 Turner county organized from parts of Dooly, Irwin, Wilcox and
OJenkins county organized from parts of Bulloch, Burke, Emanuel,and
Worth.
Screven.
C>
""'
QUANTITY OF COTTON, EXCLUSIVE OF LINTERS, GINNED FROM THE CROPS OF 1903 TO 1907, BY COUNTIES-Continued.
------------------------------------------------------
GEORGIA.
COUNTY.
TOTAL NUMBER OF BALES GINNED (COUNTING ROUND AS HALF BALES)-
1907
1906
1905
1904
1903
NUMBER OF EQUIVALENT 500-POUND BALES-'
1907
1906
1905
*tEmanuel. _______________________ FFlaoyyedtt_e__________________________-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_Forsyth __________________________ tFranklin _________________________
Fulton ___________________________ Gilmer ___________________________ Glascock _________________________ Gordon __________________________ OGrady ___________________________
Greene. __________________________ Gwinnett. ________________________ tHabersham. ______________________ HalL ____________________________ Hancock _________________________
Haralson _____________ =- __________
Harris ___________________________ Hart_____________________________
21,358 13,177 14,787 11,947 23,496
2,286 128
4,643 9,922 5,084
18,117 26,418
725 17,040 17,931
8,981 20,661 20,461
18,485 11,473 13,986 10,541 19,107
2,510 22
3,578 8,964 7,716
14,315 22,113
633 15,886 13,931
7,912 24,253 16,874
16,665 12,433 _13,626
10,906 18,996
23,194
12,609 15,141 12,414
27,547
14,045 10,009 9,403
8,085 18,711-
2,184
2,629
1,556
7 4,482
5 4,901
3 3,076
9,853
10,208
6,681
8,282 ---------- ---------.. -
16,856
16,373
12,523
23,564
27,523
16,508
825
3,241
1,650
16,083
16,705
10,155
16,754
18,709
13;892
8,017 23,365
16,6551
8,267 25,385 19,567
4,232 17,415 14,822
20,805 13,211 14,027 10,279 21,076
2,135 125
4,833 10,111
4,685
18,650 24,093
648 14,750 18,157
8,006 20,487
1~,041
17,946 11,542 13,343 9,782 17,353
2,345 20
3,668 8,801 7,323
14,670 20,415
563 13,694 13,870
7,133 24,122 15,652
16,626 12,557 13,081 9,510 17,058
2,040 7
4,607 9,8!12 7,824
16,957 21,537
738 13,992 16,855
7,279 23,412 15,423
Heard _____________ -- -- ---- -- ---Henry --- -- __ -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -Houston' _____________________ -~ __ 5,6,7Irwin _________________________ Jackson __________________________ . Jasper ___________________________ 8Jeff Davis ________________________
Jefferson _________________________ *Jenkins __________________________
Johnson __________________________
JLoanuersen__s -_-_-_-_-_-__-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-___:_____-_-_-_-_-_-
Lee ______________________________
LLiinbceortlyn __-__________--__-_- _____-_- _-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_Lowndes _________________ -- ______ L~mpkin. ________________________
McDuffie _________________________ Mcintosh_________________________ Macon ___________________________ Madison __________________________ Marion ___________________________
Meriwether _______________________ Miller ________ ------ ______ ------ __ Milton ___________________________ l\{itche!L _________________________ Monroe ______ ---- ________ ---- ____
tMontgomery ______________________
Morgan - _-------- ---------- -----Murray -- ------ -------- ---- -- -- --
12,771 27,762
23,312 9,065
39,871 23,432
1,214
27,118 14,040 12,305 15,810
39~372
13,080 1,136
10,596 5,939 524
12,288 46
14,406 23,796
8,099
29,653 2,745 8,223 18,245
22,813
13,471 31,827
3,133
16,003 24,377
22,715 9,332
34,895 21,032 -1,008
21,069 11,273 10,362 15,353 31,743
11,471 986
7,036 6,438
376
9,084 22
14,934 19,657
6,455
27,206 2,539 6,91S
17,219 23,606
11,328 25,669
2,974
15,250 23,618
14,617 28,478
9,859 19,059
20,545
30,421
17,829
10,631
13,913
7,891
34,689
37,924
28,388
21,532
19,826
16,978
1,255 ---------- ----------
25,929
29,122
20,073
16,786 ---------- ----------
12,042
14,917
8,785
14,489
16,203
13,603
30,274
35,196
21,559
11,766
1,692 8,518 9,441
185
14,933 1,788 9,197
8,519 281
9,627 840
6,632 5,460
81
10,277 47
13,220 19,001
8,434
10,273 53
18,820 20,923 11,025
8,121 39
12,819 15,487
7,505
27,007 2,387 7,701
18,665 21,036
29,178 2,677
8,465 20,892 25,003
19,599
1,883 4,718 12,168 17,401
9,819 30,701
3,511
12,698 31,253
4,008
7,652 22,708
2,323
12,615 27,162
23,872 8,477
36,490 23,727
1,118
27,275 13,994 12,162 16,344 38,955
12,756 962
10,971 4,879 426
12,448 39
14,397 21,792
7,911
29,635 2,935 7,126
18,411 22,873
13,419 31,441
2,928
15,696 24,065
23,056 8,856
32,424 21,478
884
20,745 11,047 10,035 16,078 31,508
11,471 828
7,195 5,382
324
9,353 20
15,059 18,159
6,220
27,685 2,655 6,123
16,892 23,902
11,002 25,464
2,915
15,341 23,382
21,244 10,008 32,469 22,092
1,112
25,359
16,480
11,922 14,953 29,787
U:;; l
...;
>-<
11,484
(f)
...;
1,479
>-< (')
8,552 !P
8,249 155
1-'
~
0
00
10,071
I
1-'
42 ~
13,352
0
~
17,557
8,046
27,115 2,382
6,592 18,028 21,288
9,721 31,613 0'>
3,209 '.0
QUANTITY OF COTTON, EXCLUSIVE OF LINTERS, GINNED FROM THE CROPS OF 1903 TO 1907, BY COUNTIES-Continued.
GEORGIA,
COUNTY.
Muscogee ________________________ Newton __________________________
Oconee ___________________________ Oglethorpe _______________________
~fc~~~~: Pierce __=_=__=_==__==__==__==__==__=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_= -==-
Pike _____________________________ Polk _____________________________ Pulaski __________________________ Putnam __________________________ Quitman _________________________
Randolph ________________________ Richmond ____________________ ,. ___ Rockdale _________________________
*~~:~~~~ ==== == == == == == == == == == ====
TOTAL NUMBER OF BALES GINNED (COUNTING ROUND AS HALF BALES)-
NUMBER OF EQUIVALENT 500-POUND BALES-
1907
1906
1905
1904
1903
1907
1906
1905
6,587 25,866
15,954 26,646 12,152
1,985 2,782
20,080 11,297 25,330 17,818
6,361
25,887 10,729
9,079 6,835 18,711
7,489 22,013
11,502 20,368 10,672
1,865 2,198
19,292 11,706 22,455 14,377
5,113
18,218 9,650 7,237 5,879
15,038
7,226 23,301
10,729 23,214 11,174
2,282 6,134
18,010 13,597 22,164 1.'5,124
5,901
21,331 9,633 8,115 5,975
22,144
9,527 24,634
14,195 27,096 12,446 2,6681
6,532
19,792 13,959 27,591 12,764 6,750
26,806 9,016 9,900 8,208
27,450
5,755 18,080
I
11,472 21,484
8,421 1,747 4,823
13,201 7,607
16,470 11,383
5,144
19,221 6,388 6,597 5,750
14,5841
6,337 25,902
15,648 26,428 11,066
1,802 2,189
20,040 10,559 26,161 18,192
6,496
24,831 10,731 9,030
6,879 18,455'
7,124 21,995
11,481 19,916 9,846
1,690 1,688
19,458 11,237 23,295 14,483
5,142
17,558 9,411 7,056 6,006
14,353
7,014 23,441
10,686 21,728 9,990
2,067 4,860
18,262 13,219 22,601 15,638
5,925
20,264 9,691 7,985 5,951
21,125
tSpalding __ --- __ -- ________ _,. ______ Stephens _______ --~- ______________ Stewart __________________________ Sumter _________._________________ Talbot ___________________________
Taliaferro.: _______________'________ tTattnalL _________________________ Taylor ___________________________ Telfair ___________________________ Terrell __ - ________________________
*Thomas ________ -- ________________ tTift_ __ - ________ ---- __ ---- __ -- ____ tToombs ________ -- -- ____ -- __ -- ____
Troup___ - ______ ---- ____ ---------OTurner ___________________________
Twiggs ___________________________ Upson ___________________________ Walker___________________________
Walton-------------------------Ware __________ ---- ____ ----------
Warr"en __________________________
W Waaysnhei_n__g_t_o:n_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_--_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_Webster__________________________ White__________ ---- ____ ----------
Whitfield _________________________ 4,5Wilcox _________________________
Wilkes ___________________________ Wilkinson ________________________ tOWorth ------------------------~
I
16,757 6,149
15,270 31,976 10,438
9,726 8,384 8,262 9,963 34,054
10,581 5,655 6,540
22,302 8,031
13,105 13,064
4,432 38,489
926
13,435 29,933
2,527 5,958
427
4,626 12,625 29,539 10,284 16,170
14,851 5,124
13,648 28,980 11,026
7,454 8,018 7,725 8,331 27,583
12,880 6,245 5,815
22,807 6,348
10,091 13,645
5,194 28,820
673
8,676 25,506
1,921 5,341
383
4,924 9,016 21,593 7,966 12,825
14,163
16,961
10,181
5,089 ---------- ----------
15,211
19,432
12,425
28,260
36,707
25,491
11,783
12,932
9,191
8,288 10,510
7,743 8,192 29,474
8,573 16,803 10,181
9,327 34,725
7,751 8,282 6,706 5,789 25,570
14,732
22,414
14,210
5,311 ---------- ----------
6,431 ---------- ----------
23,223
22,226
14,222
6,079 ---------- -----------
9,782 12,278
4,869 33,240
548
13,378 13,953
5,051 36,127
799
8,742 9,927
2,806 23,138
112
12,328 28,998
3,474 5,554
294
13,338 37,117
3,524
8,345 542
10,564 24,983
1,460 4,418
270
4,589 10,444
22,860
9,480 14,472
4,726 11,989 25,177 10,580
21,0321
3,379
7,777 19,423
7,365 13,558
16,915 5,428 15,572 32,029 10,390
9,959 7,060 8,224 9,716 34,122
9,890 5,459 6,155 22,351 8,140
13,171 12,518
4,043 37;912
726
14,050 30,340
1,939 6,037
382
4,115 12,721 30,053 10,138 16,099
I
14,860 4,594
13,828 28,964 11,039
7,596 6,780 7,869 8,159 27,572
12,507 6,029 5,449 22,625 6,199
10,028 13,268
4,826 28,388
549
8,898 25,802
1,525 5,337
330
4,474 9,220 21,835 7,638 12,653
14,333 4,564
15,331 28,430 . 11,547
8,537 9,480 7,758 8,045
29,745
13,516 5,029
w:..;.:,
6,116 23,409
...,H
(F)
6,006
H ()
!fl
9,606
12,278
1-'
~
4,441 0
33,638
00 I
472
1-'
~
0
12,796 ~
28,940
2,737
5,676
26'3
4, 15.8 10,736 23,546
9,252 14,240
-'l 1-'
QUANTITY OF COTTON, EXCLUSIVE OF LINTERS, GINNED FROM THE CROPS OF 1903 1'0 1907,
...;z
~
BY COUNTIES.-Continued.
GEORGiA.
COUNTY.
NUMBER OF EQUIV- NUMBER OF BALES GINNED TO DECEMBER
0
ALENT 500-LB. BALES-
13 (COUNTING ROUND AS HALF BALES;-
l'j
0
~....
>
1904
1903
1907
1906
1905 I 1904 I 1903
t)
The State ______ ~- ______________________
1,887,853
1,267,364
1,632,463
--
1,514,637 1,620,741
1,790,792
1,181,541
l'j
~...,
~
*Appling _____________________________________ Baker_______________________________________ Baldwin_____________________________________
Banks_______________________________________ Bartow _____________________________________
3,961 7,389 11,961 8,854 22,571
2,074 4,944
8,639 5,780 13,146
2,491 5,933
10,778 11,459 15,586
1,470 5,211
9,987 8,465
15,696
3,651 6,185 11,224
9,009 17,135
4,570
6,971 12,554 8,941 20,287
2,177 4,811
M.z..,
8,965 5,765
g
> 11,995
tBen Hill ____________________________________ tBerrien _____________________________________
---------13,642
----------
5,382
BBriboob_k_s_________________-_-_--_-_-_-_-______-_-_--______-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_Bryan ______________________________________
12,134 14,125
1,701
8,038 7,243
715
4,776 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- ---- -- -- -- ---------- 0;..o..
8,943
9,114
7,756 1,093
10,227 9,687
10,648 1,478
9,426 8,419 10,772 1,533
13,159 10,630
13,388 1,528
4,983 7,616 5,848
651
c:(")
cti:
OBulloch ______________________________________
OBurke___ -- __________________________________ Butts _______________________________________ Calhoun_____________________________________ Camden _____________________________________ -
---
19,909 46,336 16,794
16,916
-- -- --
9,460 31,622 12,291 12,740
-- -- -- -- --
15,125 33,178 13,386 12,547
----------
16,035
29,547 11,951
9,597 6
16,565
19,586
"" [;;'
9,402
-36,358
47,406
30,928
13,173
15,301
10,288
12,503
15,826
11,677
22 ---------- ----------
I
8::%~~~==== 13,000
8,477
10,012
11,101
== == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == CChaatroltoonsa_._-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_--_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_Chatham ____________ - ______________________
31,753
715
----------
277
19,676 203
37
----------
26,494 428
---------124
26,368 231
----------
135
Chattahoochee _______________________________ Chattooga ___________________________________ Cherokee ____________________________________ Clarke ____________________________ -- ________
Clay ________ --------------------------------
6,693 9,044
9,995 8,590
1'3,878
4,550 6,028
5,995 8,455
9,101
5,152 7,426
7,980 12,892
10,664
5,819 8,280
8,263 7,761 8,146
Clayton _________ -~ __________________________ Clinch ______________________________________ Cobb _______________________________________
-g~~:itt= == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == ==
11,273 800
16,875 6,489
7,367
7,910 429
10,456 2,786
3,843
Columbia ____________________________________
Coweta___ - __________________________________ Crawford __________________________ -- ________
12,629 31,524 8,120
10,693 21,890
6,376
5CDraiwspso_n__-________-__-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_----- -_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-__-_-_-_-
-- -- -- -- --
1,501
---------809
11,569 651
14,021 5,138 6,384
14,601 24,476
6,401 13,072
1,476
10,082 441
13,716 5,379 6,739
12,097 28,145 5,937 10,877
1,295
6Decatur- ________________ -- __________________ DeKalb _____________________________________ Dodge_ .. ________________ ---- __ -- __ -- ________
5,7Dooly _____________________________________ Dougherty___________________________________
17,663 10,424 20,1586
36,715
18,659
10,413
5,636 14,246 25,102 12,444
6,524
8,915 19,284
22,694 12,823
8,762 8,312 18,248
22,919
11,949
Douglas. ____________________________________
~:h~;== == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == ~re:~th~~= == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == ==
8,171
17.301 336
2,087 20,290
5,9671 11,770
204 940 15,025
1,858 13,126
249 1,669 19,384
7,287 12,049
289
1,478
16,681
11,677
11,368
7,239
30,760
29,946
17,584
373
376
215
5 ---------
30
81 ---------- -- -- ---- --
5,415 8,143 8,992
7,328 9,731
6,600
8,709 10,283
8,680 13,291
4,186
5,827 6,114 7,549 8,702
10,495 862
10,815 887
;; 6,819 Ul 336
13,663
15,388
9,882
8
1-<
5,80L 5,402
6,717 6,690
2,668
(f)
8
3,546
1-< ()
!/'
13,67a
11,707
9,984
30,557 5,825
28,724 8,351
19,977
1-'
~
5;690 0
10,172 ---------- ----------
1,365
1,446
737
00
I
1-'
~
0
10,047
16,178
9,819 ~
8,561
10,076
4,978
17,370
19,348
13,332
20,748
38,030
24,044
12,528
18,000
12,362
8,200
14,770 427
2,011
17,652
7,880 16,039
366 2,067 20,480
5,227 11,219
224 829
15,232 "'l <:>:;
QUANTITY OF COTTON, EXCLUSIVE OF LINTERS, GINNED FROM THE CROPS OF 1903 TO 1907,
-'! fl>.
BY COUNTIES.-Continued.
COUNTY.
GEORGIA.
NUMBER OF EQUIV~ ALENT 500-LB. BALES-
1904
1903
*tEmanueL _________________::. ________________ Fayette _____________________________________
~~~~~th= tFranklin _==__==__==__==__==__==__==__==__=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=
22,210
12,735 14,778
11,768 24,826
13,128
10,009 9,121
7,276 16,840
Fulton ______________________________________ Gilmer ______________________________________ Glascock ____________________________________ Gordon _____________________________________
2,366 5
4,832
10,718
1,478 3
3,113
6,601
OGrady -- __ ---- -- -- --r- -- -- -- -- -- ---- -- -- ---- ---------- ----------
Greene ______________________________________ Gwinnett____________________________________ !Habersham __________________________________
HHaanlLco_c_k__________-_-_____-_-____._._____-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_--_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-
16,600 25,303
2,703 14,733 18,560
12,598 14,890
1,485
9,139 14,531
Haralson_; __________________________________ Harris ____________________ - ________________
7,358 25,588
3,724 17,927
NUMBER OF BALES GINNED TO DECEMBER 13 (COUNTING ROUND AS HALF BALES)-
0
M 0
~
0
> H
1907
18,748 11,365 12,491
9,640 21,291
1906
16,960 10,870 12,657
8,784 17,595
1905
16,367 11,967 12,395 10,226 17,835
1904 I 1903
t:J
M
20,427
11,609 13,211
"~ '
12,891 :;-::
.., 8,797
8,791
M z
11,252
7,IOO
24,613
17,069 ~
1,928 12
3,935 8,023 4,439
16,543 23,656
618 14,506 16,667
2,264 10
3,411 8,271 6,839
13,739 20,6()3
521 13,337 13,779
1,977
2,212
4----------
4,237
4,168
6' 1,209 3 2,773 ~
8,967
9,175
6,301
7,837 ------ -- -- ----------
(")
c:: ~
16,199 22,267
14,734 24,565
.11,867 14,382
c::
:1
817
2,786
1,364
15,429
14,611
8,814
16,751
18,044
13,384
7,521 18,035
6,869 23,098
7,536 22,293
7,258
')~ ~~2
2,940 15,519
Hart_ _____________________ ------ ______ -----Heard ______________________________________ Henry ________________ ----------------------
18,199 14,822 28,077
13,933 9,248 19,059
Houston ______________________________ ------
28,913
17,963
5,6,7Irwin ____________________________________
12,632
7,395
Jackson _________________________ --.-- ________
34,824
26,685
Jasper ______________________________________
20,142
17,097
8Jeff Davis _________________ ------ ____ -------- -- ---- -- -- ----------
Jefferson ________________ -------- ____ --------
28,891
19,872
"Jenkins _______________________________ -- __ -- -- -- -- -- -- ----------
Johnson__ c _________________ - ________ -- -- -- --
14,649
8,614
Jones _______ ---- ______________________ ------
15,914
13,676
Laurens ___________________ ------ ____ --------
35,476
21,545
Lee___________________________ -- ______ -----Liberty _______________________________ -----Lincoln _________________________________ ---Lowndes ______________________________ ---~--
Lumpkin ______________________ -- ______ ------
14,784 1,512
9,326 7,715
247
9,207 721
6,659 4,421
73
McDuffie ________________________________ ----
Mcintosh______________________ -- ______ -----Macon __________________________________ ---Madison __________________________________ -Marion ______________________________________
10,335 48
18,293 18,770 10,478
8,343 33
13,004 14,248
7,293
Meriwether ________________________ ---------Miller_________________________________ -----Milton ______________________________________ MitchelL __________________ -----------------Monroe _________________________________ -- --
28,131
2,677 7,111 21,546 24,554
19,595 1,960 4,10.'>
11,853 16,927
tMontgomery _________________________________ Morgan _________________ --------------------
13,1.'>5 31,275
7,562 22,693
19,264 11,290 24,748
15,934 14,313 23,099
21,190
7,909 36,185 20,690
1,163
21,513
11,636 31,534 19,072
951
23,856 12,180
10,786 14,179
33,163
20,453 10,758
9,860 14,906 30,254
11,866 903
9,335
4,733 446
10,712 825
6,679
5,881 308
10,876
8,734
14 ----------
12,919
.14,183
22,343
17,400
7,236
6,296
26,035 2,518
7,456 15,831 20,452
25,876 2,173
6,590 15,996 22,523
11,356 28,066
. 9,317 24,295
16,352 14,542 22,578
18,236 12,624 25,919
13,568 8,561
16,428
19,487
30,065
16,546
9,666
12,948
6,658
33,053
33,555
25,755
20,408
17,849
15,131
1,173 ---------- ----------
24,716
26,434
18,953
16,025 ---------- ----------
10,945
13,781
8,143
13,744
14,402
12,492
29,038
33,348
20,378
(/)
;!
.~ ....
ffl
10,885
14,310
8,918 ;~:;
1,461
1,481
631 Y'
8,180 7,656
8,010 7,89.5
6,219
4,601
f-' <:.0
185
229
67
0 00
9,803
9,184
I
7,608
f-' <:.0
30 12,259
22 17,924
19 12,091
0 <:.0
18,232
19,232
14,656
8,113
10,773
7,335
26,429' 2,298 7,402
17,718 19,922
27,.566 2,430
?,6.'>3 19,937 22,597
17.786 1,793 4,344
11,001 15,097
9,004 29,120
11,394 27,164
6,547 20,262
-~ 0\
QUANTITY OF COTTON, EXCLUSIVE OF LINTERS, GINNED FROM THE CROPS OF 1903 TO 1907, BY COUNTIES--Continued.
GEORGIA.
COUNTY.
NUMBER OF EQUIVALENT 500-LB. BALES-
NUMBER OF BALES GINNED TO DECEMBER 13 (COUNTING ROUND AS HALF BALES)-
1903
Murray _______________ -- __ -- ______ ----------
~~!~~;e_e~= == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == ==
Oconee_____________________________________ _ Oglethorpe _________________________________ _ Paulding ____________________________________ Pickens ____________________________________ _
Pierce ______________ ---- __ -- ____ ------------
Pike __________________ -- ______________ ------ I
Polk _______________________________________ _ Pulaski ____________________________________ _ Putnam ____________________________________ _ Quitman ___________________________________ _
Randolph __________________________________ _ Richmond __________________________________ _ Rockdale___________________________________ _ Schley __________________________________ -- __ *Screven ____________________________________ _
3,303 9,376 24,634
13,616 25,802 11,376
2,348 4,980
20,068 13,738 27,812 12,764
6,588
26,592 8,980 9,860 8,192
24,898
2,091 5,646 18,235
11,610 21,484
7,579 1,537 3,722
13,490 7,316
15,811 11,429
4,732
18,841 6,240 6,597 5,744
14,352
2,713 5,790 22,912
13,990 23,315 10,633
1,627 1,894
18,126 9,240 22,659 15,095 5,574
23,143 9,632 8,007 6,066
16,175
2,701 7,197 21,012
10,874 17,226 9,403
1,696
1,30~
18,512 10,298 21,931 13,287
4,933
16,83S 7,777 6,803 5,734
14,388
3,278 6,756 22,281
10,477 22,038 10,284
2,097 3,467
17,192 12,655 21,224 14,378
5,!j45
20,579 8,870 7,694 5,792
19,158
3,468 9,204 23,120
12,953 22,658 11,098
2,320 5,114
18,672 12,422 26,187 11,426
6,369
25,564 8,061 9,086 7,858
25,518
2,126 5,140 15,495
10,340 18,933 7,184
1,519 2,917
11,781 6,245 15,866 10,330 4,878
18,540 5,787 5,933 5,402
13,578
t~k~~~~~= 17,060
10,332
-Stewart ___=_:_:_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_= -==--==--==--==--==--==--==--=-=-=-=-=-=
---------19,470
---------12,397
Sumter______________ ------------------------
36,121
24,993
Talbot_.; __ ----------------------------------
12,958
9,173
tTTaaltitanfaelrLro____________________-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-
Taylor ________________ ---------------------Telfair ________________ -------------------- Terrell _________________________________ ____
8,624 13,444
10,222 9,178
35,331
7,704 6,752
6,572 5,789 26,123
*tTTihfto_m_a_s_______-_-_____-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_:Toombs ___ ---------------------------------OTTruorunpe_r _________________-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_----------_-__-_-----------------
20,825
-- -- -- -- ----- -- -- --
21,381
----------
13,394
---- -- -- -----------
14,506
----------
Twiggs________ -----------------------------Upson __ - _______ ---------------~-----------WWaallktoenr________________________________-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-
Ware _________ ---- -- -- -- ---- ---- ---- ---- -- --
Warren _____________________ -~ -- ____ -- ---- --
:~~i~~t~~-= ;Webster__
-
__
== == ==
------
==
--
== == ==
------
==
--
== == == ==
--------
== == == ==
--------
White___________ ----------------------------
11,518 13,060
4,778 36,774
639
13,871 37,486
3,036 8,312
468
8,672 9,652 2,531 23,342
96
10,606 24,834
1,143 4,330
243
Whitfield______________ ----------------------
0, 5Wilcox ____________ -- ---- -- -- -- ------ -- -- -Wilkes ______________ -----------------------Wilkinson _________________ ------ __ ----------
t, OWorth ____ ---- ____________________ ---- ____
4,225 11,989 24,829
10,432 20,268
2,974 7,926 19,409 7,144
13,089
13,720 5,599
13,508 28,408
9,301
9,121 6,481 7,572 8,462 31,476
9,661 5,394 5,636 19,087 7,278
11,390 11,541
3,530 36,102
645
12,098 26,142
1,878 5,068
216
3,696 11,055 26,155 8,825 14,769
13,489 4,738 13,045 27,079 Hl,428
7,310 7,021 7,489 7,167 27,039
12,102 5,857 5,170
20,972 6,094
9,729 12,681
4,711 27,482
466
8,223 24,042
1,455 4,953
314
4,378 8,969 20,434 7,097 12,315
13,508
15,038
8,565
4,840 ---------- ----------
14,009
18,368
11,444
25,681
33,721
23,773
11,095
12,296
8,260
7,992 8,698 7,456 7,625 28,080
7,620 1 13,419 9,602 8,728 33,697
7,078
6,857 6,175 5,143 25,101
13,740
21,140
12,965 (,.f.,;
5,015 5,722
-------------------
-__- -,.. -_-_-___.__ _-_-
22,377
20,969
13,769
5,685 ---------- ----------
.,>....., V.,.....l,
()
!!'
9,246 11,701
12,470 12,975
7,919 8,729
.....
c:c
4,410 32,129
411
4,500 33,197
550
2.584 0
21,245 69
00
..I...
c:c
0
11,826
11,925
9,894 c:c
27,179
33,630
23,094
2,570
2,870
1,153
5,353
7,693
4,153
275
325
186
4,278
9,784 22,004
8,509 13,541
4,155 11,342 21,800
9,548 20,018
3,048 7,039 18,216
6,546 12,293
-1 -'l
*Jenkins county organized from parts of Bulloch, Burke, Emanuel and Screven. tToombs county organized from parts of Emanuel, Montgomery and Tattnall. tStephens county organized from parts of Franklin and Habersham.
OGrady county organized from parts of Decatur and Thomas. 5Ben Hill county organized from parts of Irwin and Wilcox. 6Tift county organized from parts of Berrien, Irwin and Worth.
7Turner county organized from parts of Dooly, Irwin, Wilcox and Worth.
8Jeff Davis county organized from parts of Appling and Coffee.
STATISTICS, 1908-1909
Table 10.-ACREAGE, PRODUCTION AND VALUE OF CORN IN GEORGIA.
Acres.
Production in Bushels.
Value.
I Bushels. per acre.
1908 I
1907 1906 1905 1904 1903 1902 1901 1900
4,452,000
4,426,000
4,338,883 4,295,924
3,977,707 3,938,324
3,899,331 3,785,758 3,411,953
56,438,000
57,538,000 52,066,596 47,255,164
47,334,713
46,078,391 35,093,979 37,857,580 34,119,530
I
$42,830,000 1 $43,729,000 34,884,619
33,078,615 33,607,646 31,794,090 25,618,605 31,043,216 19,448,132
12.7
13 12
11
11.9 11.7
9 10 10
Table 11.-ACREAGE, PRODUCTION AND VALUE OF WHEAT IN GEORGIA.
Acres.
Production in Bushels.
Value.
Bushels per Acre.
1907 1906 1905 1904 1903 1902 1901 1900
297,000 316,107
305,298 291,370 299,958 284,531
370h996 550,674
2,673,000 3,161,070
2,106,55fi 2,564,056 1,859,740
1, 707,186 3,142,167 5,011,133
$3,074,000 3,224,291 2,254,015
3,230,711 1,785,350 1,673,042
2,859,637 4,760,576
9 10
fi.9
8.8 6.2
6.0 8.2
9.1
Table 12.-ACREAGE, PRODUCTION AND VALUE OF OATS IN GEORGIA.
Acres.
Bushels.
Value.
Bushek per Acre.
1907
1906
I 1905
1904
1903 1902 1901 1900
I
300,000 216,922
233,250 235,606
256,093 264,013 296,644
467,336
5,010,000 3,362,291 3,522,075
3,486,969 3,482,865 2,930,544 4,390,331
7,010,040
$3,607,000 1,882,883
1,866,700
1,917,833 1,915,576 1,553,183 2,941,522
3,434,920
16.7 15.5 15.1 14.8
13.6 11.1 14.8 15
Table 13.-ACREAGE, PRODUCTION AND VALUE OF RYE IN GEORGIA.
1907
1906 1905 1904
1903 1902
1901 1900.
Acres.
Bushels.
Value.
Bushels per Acre.
14,500
130,000
$163,000
14,206
117,910
123,806
14,206
109,386!
119,231
13,640
113,312
111>,476
13,778
108,846
124,084
----------------- ---------------- ----------------
14,477
110,177
116,788
15,647
109,529
112,815
9 8.3 7.7 8.3
---6.3 7.6
7
80
GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF' A~RICULTURE
Table 14.-ACREAGE, PRODUCTION AND VALUE OF HAY IN GEORGIA.
Acres.
,Tons.
Value.
Tons Per Acre.
Average
Farm Price.
1907 1906
1905 1904
1903 1902
I 1901
1900
95,000
166,000 $ 2,988,000
88,054
145,289
2,288,302
88,054
132,081
2,080,276
89,851
136,574
2,067,730
88,080
136,110 2,062,066
88,080
119,789
1,605,172
No Report.
112,566
190,237
2,425,522
1. 75 1.65 1.50 1.52 1.53 1.36
1.69
S18.0P 15.75 15.75 15.14 15.15 13.40
12.75
Table 15.-ACREAGE, PRODUCTION AND VALUE OF RICE IN GEORGIA.
1907 1906
1905 1904
1903 1902 1901
1900
Acres.
Bushels
2,400
81,000
3,745
86,135
3,053
97,696
9,000
234,000
No Report
No Report
No Report
No !Report
Value
Bushels per Acre.
$85,000
34
81,828
23
99,650
32
154,440
26
Average Farm Price.
$1.05 .95
1.02 .66
Table 16.-ACREAGE, PRODUCTION AND VALUE OF IRISH POTATOES IN GEORGIA.
AVJi;RAGE ACREAGE YIELD TO
THE ACRE
Acres.
Bushels.
1907
10,000
83
1906
8,627
77
1905
8,627
65
1904
8,542
70
1903
8,628
73
1902
8,715
58
1901 No Report
64
1900
5,762
68
-----~----
PRODUCTION
AVERAGE FARM PRICE
FARM VALUE
Bushels.
830,000 664,279 560,755 597,940 629,844 50q,470
391,816
Cents.
100 110 112 107 94
90 106 77
---D-o-ll-ar-s-830,000
730,707 628,046 454,477 592,053 454,923 No Report
301,698
STATISTICS, 1908-1909
81
Table 17.-ACREAGE, PRODUCTION AND VALUE OF TOBACCO IN GEORGIA.
Acres
Pounds
Value
Average Yield Per
Acre Pounds.
Average Farm Price.
1907
1906 1905 1904 1903 1902
1901
1900
8,700 3,182,000 $1,273,000
860
3,000
2,035,000
607,500
675
2,036 1,068,900
187,713
525
1,868 1,214,200
250,125
650
2,030
1,299,200
194,000
640
2,050
1,373,500
260,965
670
1,990
982,691
176,972
494
2,066 1,023,336
148,431
495
$40.00 30.00 17.00 20.60
15.00 19.00
18.00 15.00
Table 18.-NUMBER AND VALUE OF CATTLE IN GEORGIA.
MILCH COWS.
---
I
Number Value.
--
1904
1906 1905
1904 1903 1902
308,000 305,469 299,479
277,295 280;096
274,604
$7,700,000 9,164,070 8,011,063
6,857,505 6,352,577 6,024,812
OTHER CATTLE.
I
Number Value.
TOTAL OF ALL CA.T T L E .
Number
Value.
680,000
679,911 673;179 629,139
635,494 623,033
$7,480,000 7,451,822
6,913,546 6,467,927 7,219,407
5,806,173
988,000 985,380 972,658
906,4341 915,590 897,637
$15,180,000
16,615,892 14,924,609 13,325,432
13,571,984 11,830,_985
Table 19.-NUMBER AND VALUE OF SHEEP AND POUNDS OF WOOL IN GEORGIA.
Number of Sheep.
Value of Sheep.
Pounds of Average Price
Wool.
Per Head.
1907 1906 1905
1904 1903 1902
269,000 276,632
273,893 273,893 276,660 297,484
$541,000"
550,715 588,869 496,102 476,298
I 536,186
950,000 950,000
950,000 950,000 950,000
1,000,000
$2.01 1.99 2.15
1.81 1. 72
1.80
82
GE:ORGIA DE:PARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE:
Table 20.-NUMBER AND VALUE OF HORSES
Number.
Value.
1907 1906 1905
1904
1903 1902
139,000 139,207 137,918 123,141
121,922 120,715
$15,429,000 16,827,065 15,910,168
12,243,2~3
11,575,478 7,946,663
Table 21.-NUMBER AND VALUE OF MULES.
Number.
Value.
1907 1906
1905 1904
1903 1902
232,000 229,091 225,187
201,060 195,204 193,271
$32,480,000 35,039,340
30,409,227 23,716,413
20,305,732 17,093,854
Table 22.-NUMBER AND VALUE OF HOGS IN GEORGIA.
Number.
Average Price.
Value.
1907
1906
1905
1904
1903
1902
I
1,599,000 1,582,713 1,438,830 1,396,922 .1,411,032
1,425,285
$5.50 6.00 5.45 5.14 5.25
5.23
$8,794,000 9,496,278 7,841,62.4 7,180,179
7,407,918 7,454,241
STATISTICS, 1908-1909
83
Georgia Crop Conditions With Comparisons
Table 24-ACREAGE AND PRODUCTION OF BARLEY. BUCKWHEAT, CORN, OATS, RYE AND WHEAT IN 1899, BY COUNTIES. (U. S. Census of 1900).
COUNTIES
IBARLFY BUCK- I
CORN
II
OATS
RYE
WHEAT
I WHEAT
0
I ~ i I Ac's I Bu,Is Ac's Bul's Acres
I
I I Bushels Acres
Bushels Acres l__s us 'Is
I Acres Bushels
t<i 0 ::0
.C...).
>
I The State ___________ 395 2,2901I
41 I
261 I
I
I
3,477,6841 34,032,230
318,433
3,!15,610 13,185
I Appling ________________
-----~-----'-----' Baker__________________
----' Baldwin________________
-----
----1-----1-----1
20,845\ 21,331 22,642
216,590 160,440 169,010
1,986 1,044 1,927
20,010 10,120 24,800
5 4 31
Banks________________ ,--
----21 ~==== Bartow_________________
----i,
=====
16,890 214,410
2,080 10,400
21
30,340 449,080
1,221 12,750
41
___ J---~: Berrien_________________
24,600 302,6~0
6,584 65,340
7
54,492 319,161 1,176,947
30
10
40
30 ------- ---------
290
641
3,960
60 3,423 19,750
200 18,444 109,030
30
82
710
t::J
t<i
>'"C
::0
~
:s::
zt<i
~
0 "'1
Bibb_________________ -Brooks_________________
-----1 -----
21,911 222,9-0
3,759 57,690
116
500
354
38,428 384,220 11,200 104,230
160
890
38
>- 3,300 26Q C)
Bryan__________________ Bulloch ________________
8,286 93,690 41,815 464,090
997 3,925
9,710 45,150
------- ------- ---------
6
50
49
430
:..:.0..
()
q
r
Burke__________________
-----1 -----
79,626 667,9801
3,378 45,180
71
50Q
210
1,440 q~
CBaulthtos u__n_____-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-
18,897 145,6001 25,787 242,050
1,367 1,894
17,110 17,740
12 9
94\ 2,647
40
50
19,540 ::0 200 t<i
Camden ________________ CampbelL ______ ~" ______
3,918 47,500 14,454 186,720
199 2,121
1,990 11,530
------- ------- ---------
2
2 1,533
7,870
Carroll _________________ Catoosa ________________
5 45
5 20 -----
Charlton----------------1-----1----- ----- -----1
43,149 13,609
5,346
610,930 209,100
53,4401
3,792 419 317
29,590
R
70 8,858 47,200
3,000
20
100 4,560 27,190
2,6901-------1------- -------1-----~---
Chatham _______________ ---~-~----- _____ _____ Chattahoochee __________ ----- -----
Chattooga ______________ -~
4 60
Cherokee. ____________ -- -- _-- - _---
Clarke _________________ ----- ----- ----- ----Clay___________________ _____ _____ _____ _____
Clayton________________
Clinch--------'--------- ----- ----- ----- -----
Cobb------------------
1
3~----- -----~
Coffee__________________
----- _____ _____
Colquitt________________ Columbia________ -- __ ---
____ . ----
- __ -- __ -- __ -_--I
Coweta_________________ Crawford_______________
I 1-
11 10 _____ _____
1
10 -----~-----
Dade---------------~-- _____ _____ _____ _____
Dawson ________________ ----- -----~-----~-----
Decatur________________
----- _____ _____
1
1
DeKalb ________________ ----- _____ ----.-1-----1
Dodge_________________
----- -----
DoolY------------------. Dougherty______________ Douglas________________
4 20 ----- -----
----- -----
1
4 ----~ -----
EarlY---~-------------- ----- ----- ----- -----
Echols----------------~
Effingham ______________ ----- ----- ----- ----Elbert_________________
Emanuel;-------------- ----- ----- ----- -----
Fannin_________________ 43 150 (1)
2
Fayette.__ _:____________ ----- ----- ----- -----
Floyd.. ______________ , --1 -----
2,785 40,940 14,398 122,050
22,303 27,075
9,9561 20,689 13,384
l
10.2641 32,914\ 24,541 15,692 18,3001
31,766 22,525
6,018 14,622 56,8171
339,450 392,3801
50,530 177,950 158,810
102,1001 433,9001 250,380 162,480\ 130,910\
I
350,4501 198,950 103,910 191,980 465,260
24,2201 33,6271
57,932 21,612 15,061
274,2601 274,210
441,630 180,590 190,310
31,275 5,614
11,531 26,737 52,672
18,784 19,812 35,746
310,110 55,860
127,6701 231,810 509,1601
251,090 217,0401 477,520
309 773
1,695 9021 8331
1,4371 2,038
I
5561 3,5561 3,0361 2,402 2,507
3,993 1,842
433 7201 5,107
1,6511 1,789 5,634 2,144 1,547
1,720 228 788
3,370 1,838
8751 1.137 3,347
6,430~-------~-------
8,010
11
50
13,1601 4,8401 7,2001
11,6901
29\
140
901 360\
15
1201
11
401
301 73
I 3,935\ 6,347 1,313.1
141
300 390
19,260 29,600
7,870 0
19,990------- -------
I
4,3801 -------1-------1
21,4801 29,310
---~--4-41
3601 -------
20,9201 -------1 -------
26,3001
5
301
I
30,7101
13
110
2,054
3! 5,7561
31 6\
405
4,096
13,910
20 28,040
270 70 ~
2,540 >
j 29,160 ~
22,010 3,R60 4,290
41,190
10
100
715
43
230 2,3961
337 1,020 2,602
15
130
84
4,620 () 13,170 !!'
9,880 1,080 ~
14,840 14,100
651
720
1 3,0411
21,590
~
44
220
1571
970 ~
54,430
1631 970
580
16,780
20
160
5
3 920 60
~ o
13,600
8
60 2,305 11,260
I
16,000 ------- -------
1
7
2,210 _____________________ ---------
7,770 _____________________________ _
23,410
46
190 5,467 27,040
14,980
20
130
195
1,310
5,240
10,910 26,530
1,208
4 103
3,850
40 506
2,084
1,989 7,744
6,450 12,870 40,930 ~
ACREAGE AND PRODUCTION OF BARLEY, BUCKWHEAT, CORN, OATS, RYE AND WHEAT IN 1899, BY
00 00
COUNTIEs: (U. S. Census of 1900).
COUNTIES
t I I BARLEY BUCKWHEAT
i I I lI I Ac's Bus. Ac's Bus /
Fors~h-- ______________ Fran lin _____________ ~_
1
, 7 _____ _____
----- -----
Fulton _________________ Gilmer _________________
Glascock _______________ Glynn __________________ Gordon ________________
===~~ ----- -----
-----1=--=-=--J
CORN
I I
Acres Bushels /
I
21,871 274,290 28,525 302,090
10,342
19,826 13,273
1,535 26,412
135,520
282,240 90,410 21,570
402,250
OATS
RYE
WHEAT
I Acres II Bushels
Acres
I Bus'ls) Acres Bushels
782 1,921
3,9601 9,840
24481
70 5,559 250 8,105
26,610 39,910
875
9,4901
109 1,430
869
5,720
757
6,200
804 2,710 1,653
6,710
---- 526
147
~:~~g,_ ~~
200 1,703 _____5_,_8_90...
952
6,140
119
530 13,159 86,430
0
1't 0 ::<:l
.c.;.'.) > t1
1't
"'>
::<:l
1:s-:i
1z't
1-i
Greene. ________________ Gwinnett_______________
Habersham. ____________
21 180 -----
1
2
24,134 46,218 19,987
157,830
516,340 241),710
3,556 2,061
623
31,950 13,460 5,500
7])
450 '4,170
401 1,780 10,168
571 1,690 2,322
0
21,980 "1
> 53,910
11,690 c;')
HHaanlLco_c_k____-_-_-_-_____-_-_-_-_-_-_-_- 11 50 ----------~ ----------
33,727 411.290 38,599 261,540
1.092
6,800
183
720 8,345
32,860 .::.<.:.l
4,378 45,930
43
240 3,436
18,500 (c):
Haalson _______________ Harris _________________ Hart.. _________________ Heard _________________
----- -----
3 30
16,905
29,510 20,718 25,149
227,360 313,250
192,900 298,090
2,212 4,904 1,290 2,593
16,100
52,300' 8,420
26,950
35 18
200 2,764 200 2,892
9,540 9,770
o ~
::<:l
14
80 5,312 28,760 1't
11
45 3,559 22,330
.Henry---- ---- -- ------ 6 80
29,589 340,270
2,374 63,840
15
110 6,305 46,150
-- -----} Houston ____ __________
Irwin __________________ Jackson ________________
------.~
_-_-_-_-_-, _____
---------1
" 5 -----I ---- -
49,447
18,430 37,558
380,810 202,4301 321,770
8,622
3.675 3,325
97,140
42,250 17,420
189 4
69
910 1,754
60
103
350 9,947
12,730
700 54,99(}.
----1--.-- .-... --~- JJeMffeprs"o-n-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-__ -- .2,. 10 ----- -----
JJoonhensso__n________________________________ Laurens ________________ Lee ____________________ Liberty ________________
----5
-------------
----50
----------
-----
---------------
-----
--------------------
---~~~ ~~~~~ Lincoln ________________
Lowndes _______________
-----' Lumpkin _______________
McDuffie _______________ Mcintosh_______________
1 3
-----
-----
30
-----
-----
---------
---------
Macon ___ .:._____________ Madison______ ~- ________
----- ----- Marion. ________________
-----
-----
-----
-----
----------
-----\ Meriwether _____________
Miller __________________
2
----1-5
-----
-----
-----
----- ----- -----
Milton _________________
MitchelL _______________ Monroe ________________ Montgomery ____________ Morgan ________________
I
----;j ~~~~~~ ~~~~~~ ~~~~~\
2 13 ---------
79 325
Murray ________________ Muscogee _______________ Newton ________________ Oconee_________________
Oglethorpe-------------
----..J 1 2
22 206
2 30 _____ -----I 79 330 ----- -----~
Paulding_______________
41 201-----
Pick,ns ________________ -----1 -----1----- -----1
26,008 180,900 44,282 537,630
29,523 26,685 61,606 30,086
15,198
225,660 198,470
534,600 249,480
166,550
11,806 25,885
15,0131 17,130 1,555
95,140 279,560
166,570 111,650 20,980
33,292 22,356
32,347 43,459
16,638
I
13,061
40,083 37,015
33,597 26,044
262,160 200,300 219,480
439,2001 134,510
I
182,500 375,710 271,000 346,600 187,400
19,519 13,808 22,105 13,962
3{),1831
24,080 14,2531
297,640 140,470 166,580
64,260 226,500
305,500 196,3701
2,617 3,853
2,442 3,428 1,848 2,021 1,463
3,397 4,976
377 2,826
77
4,374 1,641 1,913 3,497 1,7151
905 2,197 5,054 2,302 2,063
482 1,808 3,078 1,721 4,071
1,390 7451
38,430
11
130 2,403 20,30()
39,240
270
850 2,213
9,320
25,080
62
210
299
1,860
36,380
27
110
408
2,790
19,230
89
490
259
1,520
22,840
35
60
88
760
14,950 31,920
1 2
10 20
- --1~~;~,- -- -1~~~~~
42,600
55
380
321
340
2,100
2441 610
26,870
19
70
840 ------- -------
835
2,890
1,106
4,51~
---------
.w;..;,
(,...f...).,
50,010 11,370 25,130
19
50
854
14
50 6,113
853 3,090 2,201
5,090 .....
34,640 10,920
(")
Y'
40,080
22
130 4,412
25,510 1-'-
14,010 --- -- -- -------
3
10
(0
0
I
00
I
5,330 20,970
9 20
40 2,826
100
17
17,130 1-'-
60
(0
0
68,260
138 1,180 3,862
26,110 (0
27,900
1
13
74
810
26,540
27
210 2,914 23,520
4,990 26,440 32,210
15,570 32,110
67
250 5,078 19,180
23
140
108
750
11
62 3,740 25,800
69
460 3,621 22,070
54
250 8,832 49,45\.1
8,470
21
5,6401 207
70 4,709 780 3,777
19,940 15,370 00
(0
ACREAGE AND PRODUCTION OF BARLEY, BUCKWHEAT, CORN, OATS, RYE AND WHEA't IN 1899, BY
c:c
COUNTIES. (U. S. Census of 1900).
0
I BARLEY BUCK-
CORN
OATS
RYE
WHEAT
WHEAT
COUNTIES
I I II
Ac's Bus. Ac's Bus.
---------1-- -- -- --
PPiikeer_c_e_-_--_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_~_-_-_-_-_- ---1-4 Polk ________________________
--------7--01~--_--_--_--_--_1~--_--_--_-_--.-_1
Acres
13,8491 29,990 22,360
Bushels
I 156,2101 219,220 319,280
I I Acres i; Bushels Acres Bus'ls Acres Bushels.
I
I
1--
1,7201 15,590 -------
5
70
2,8501 30,350
58
350 4,285 22,050
1,8221 17,710
78
600 5,867 33,85(l
0 i:S .~... >
t:1
M >,;
-----1-----' ----- PPuultansakmi _-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-----11-----6 1051 ____ _
Quitman ______________ _ Rabun ________________ _
43,959 24,111
12,096 44,767
302,440
144,550 94,490 182,380
3,696
2,884 1,282
39
37,920
36,500 16,710
480
76
380
371
34
200 1,841
1
10
243
435 1,620
33
2,900 11,220
1,030 150
> ~
~
M z
Randolph--------------
44,767 372,620
1,668 16,440
19!)
880
526
3,230 8
Richmond _____________ _ Rockdale______________ _ Schley ________________ _ Screven _______________ _ Spalding ______________ _
Stewart ______ ---- _____ _ Sumter________________ _ Talbot ________________ _ Taliaferro _____________ _ Tattnall ______________ _
17,017 175,570
2,173 48,020
29
460
241
1,290 @
---- I -----1-----
----------~----------~----------
12,007 16,351 43,087
120,910 122,600 429,540
1,584 11,940
2
1,001
8,840
204
3,197 . 33,030
34
10 2,524
680
375
250
16
> 15,190 1,790 0 100 .!:.<..!
-----I ----- -----.I 18,988 J 49,430
1,928 22,540
77
750 2,653
19,910
()
q
I
I
I
r
37,8101 312,480 49,861 442,330
3,753 4,344
36,410 43,0401
46
270
807
69
320
402
3.880 2,870
8 q !:<!
23,141 174,090
3,Q54' 31,390
46
520 1,274
8,180 M
12,872 94,160
2,491
19,470
12
70
961
5,330
36,229 401,070
2,181 23,500
16
70
7
40
Tavlor ________________ _ Telfair _________________ , _____ , _____ [-----[-----.
Terrell _________________ ----- -----1-----1 ---- I
22,2431 18,625 39,4631
I 188,7701 193,400 381,8701
.2,316 1,465 3,0651
27,520 16,040 30,3401
1
7117\i
3221001
2,004\' 17
10.930 180
57
260
333
2,290
Thomas ________________ Towns _________________
Troup______________ -- __ Twiggs. ________________ Union __________________ Upson _________________ Walker_________________
Walton ________________ Ware __________________ Warren ________________ ~ashington ------------
Wayne _________________ Webster________________ White _________________ Whitfield _______________
Wilcox _________________ Wilkes _________________ Wilkinson __________ -- __ Worth _________________
1
-----
2
_____ , _____ ----- -----
----- -----
3 30
16 110 -----
----- -----
11 80 -----
1
2
-----~-----
30
170
-----
----------
--------------
55,5331 9,301
30,033 23,724 18,439 23,550 28.835
34,676 10,135 22,511 75,362
] 1,878 21,450 13,996 22,854
17,863 30,2137 38,322 33,9421
549,780 118,230
335,380 170,860 232,560 184,280 448,190
258,160 122,880 138,030 603,240
132,210 155,380 189,050 355,950
158,810 256,670 276,980 338,770
7,740 398
2,562 1,025
1,2~2
2,8211 1,455
2,236 819
3,007 5,862
1,299 498 534 824
2,073 6,662 2,551 4,810
68,270
10
60
30
2,210
122
490 1,12:1
2,090
30,750 11,330 7,170 29,540 11,950
18
160 2,2651
63
210
1491
687 1,640 3,317
57
320 2,442
34
100 9,264
15,230 9-70
7,090 14,220
53,580
19,850
136
310 7,514 44,540
9,080
---------
27,350
14
110 1,6221
69,200 1,029 3,760 3,963
7,080 if)
19,080 >~
.>..-.>.
12,050
40
401
3,040
12il 370
204
430 Ul 930 .>..-.>.
3,650
608 2,150- . 1,690
5,810
(') ~Ul
10,750
94
460 8,556 45,439
f-l.
16,590 57,770
20,6501 49,510
12
100
72
35
220 3,650
622 1,710
453
9
90
2551
460
<.0 0
23,400
00 I
2,010 f-l.
1,460
<.0 0
<.0
Ta.ble 25-ACREAGE AND PRODUCTION OF SPECIFIED CLASSES OF HAY AND FORAGE IN 1899, BY COUNTIES. (U. S. Census of 1900).
Counties
Wild, Salt and Millet and Hun Alfal- II fa or I
Prairie Grasses garian Grasses Lue'n(
I
Clover
II Other Tame II Grains Cut
I I and
I
Cultivated Grasses
I
Green
for
Hay
I
I I I I I I I ~A Acres Tons Acres Tons
1
IT Acres 1 Tons Acres Tons Acres / Tons
Forage Crops
S 'wn for Forage I Corn
I Stalks
Acres Tons II Tons
62,050\ 65,978\ 40,525\ 42,2111 21,9811 28,1551 136,924
\------\------~------' J Appling _________
I
_____ _[ --1-- ------ _____
371
BakPr___________ ------ ------ ------ ------ __ __
1
1
18
Baldwin_________
60
60 __ __ __
21 7
420
~:~!sw_ == == == == = 100 120
-1 58 -- --85- _- _ =_-
41
___ _420 29 1,430
13 20 581
581 1,647
51 6
537
537
1,899
46 -- -- ---
9 j
19
205
144
205
144
2,354
284
Berrien __ __ __ ___
9
9
7
8 16 23
66
69
351
254
28
20
Bibb____________ 206 206
13
14
3
11
705
754
69
154
102
Brooks__________
2
1
50
35
761
648
18
16
209
Bryan __ __ __ __ __ Bulloch_________
13 1
8 2
-- -- -~-
-- -- -3
==
==
60 120.
7
20
301
280
7 294
9 401
9 311
11
Burke__________ _
7
8.
Butts _______ ----
Calhoun_________
10
10
Camden _________ : __ __ __ _____ _
CampbelL _____ --1 _____ _
-1 Carroll _________
26
34
1 2
3llI11--21I1-4-2
5 -- --
1 1
1 1
.: ----::1 ~~ :::::~i :::::;1
242
271
349
174
99
137
514
368
-------1-------1 -------1
4u57
4~76~ 100021. 1~24
301
3781 2381 459
92 87 365 62 65
269
1,905
34
280
129
346
139
346
354 1,045
2,152
189 1,152
187 1,323
9'
524
2,059
.'>9 4,366
102 1,53.9
381
3.17
84
306
69 1,005
402 2,405
-~ I -~r --~: Catoosa _________ 350 340 885
Charlton ________ Chatham ________ 443 308
30 -- 44 =2 =2=1---- ---- ------
501 2
628
Cnattahoochee ___
------ ---f -- ------ ------
1
Chattooga _______ 126 122
89 159 --\ -- ~- 49 . 74I 952
Cherokee ________
66
71
11
12 1 1
5
5 742
Clarke __________
2
2
7
9 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
Clay ____________ Clayton _________
-------- ----
-- -- --- -- --
----2-0
-- -- 2-3-
--
--
---
-- -- --
-- -- --
------
-- ----
673 252 882
I
~~I ~~ ~~ ~~~ ~~ ~~ ~~~-- !:9g~ Clinrh ____ -- ____
Cobb ___________ Coffee ___________
-- -- --
14
17
-73 129 1
Colquitt_________
1
2 --1------1------l
38[
Columbia________
29
37
--( -- -- -- -- -- --
286
595 163 148 3
770 334 471 1
1,016 794 728 225
1,101
423 516
878 1,155
201
272
10
5
181
207
58
20
12
2,421 1,038 1,881
99 ------- -------
391 2261 1631
317
164
130
211 4
16~1
---- 92
2801
~~;!
81
211
211
358 509
86 113
79 104
2 584
90~,
100 120
4141 4621
221
210
Coweta__________ 423 322
10
12 -- -- -- -- -- .:_ --
Crawford ________
16 26 -- ------ ------
Dade - ______ -- -Dawson _________ Decatur _________
-- -- --
34 7
-- -- --
66 4
97 142 -- -- 275 347
15 3
-- 20 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
5 --
73
51
9~~ ~~I ~J ----~~ ----~~~ DeKalb _________
Dodge _________ -
98 123! 68
5,
7
1
DDoooulgyh_e_r_t_y___________-__-_-_-_-_-_-
Douglas _________ , ______
------
-- -- --
7 44 4
~~ ==I~= -----7 -----7 7 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
I
Early ___________ Echols __________
---- --
-- -- --
4
4 -- --
5
5
~~ ~~ ~~-----~II ~- -~~ Effingham _______
Elbert __________
-- -- --
64
-----91
80
-- -- --
100 ------
--
--
---
EmanueL _______ ------1------1
11
Fannin__________ [
61[I 81[I
1 5::1 341
23
12
1
1
--
201
11791 348
201 554
23
30
165 302
298 . 159
345 55 309 273
469 11 66 2
411 23
105 2
266
233
327
148
409
385
2,666 2,823 600 680 709 1,403
831
64
193
190
113
132
17
19
95
73
253
199
337
243
14
6
801
638
111
244
24
63
50
95
15
151
51
4 -------1-------
36
--- -- --
26
--- -- --
23
--- -- --
47
------3
------6
1,3~gl
1,406 18
706 47
629 55
176 2
245 4
1,597 1,786
55
118
1101 1621
124 314
71 1,339
799 702 165 464 349
354 1,018
944 84
(/l
> ~
~ >-<
715
(f) ~
>-<
(")
2,474 !!'
958 38
1-' <:0
1,330 1,420
0 00
'1-'
<:0
424 1,352
0 <:0
1,367
910
1,145
490 144 645 1,106 1,796
446
<:0
~
ACREAGE AND PRODUCTION OF SPECIFIED CLASSES OF HAY_AND FORAGE IN 1899, BY COUNTIES.
.~ ...
(U. S. Census of 1900).
I I
Wild, Salt and Millet and HunjAlfal-1
I II Other Tame II Gra-ins Cut
Forage CroIps
I fa or/
Prairie Grasses garian Grasses ILuc'n
I I
Clover
II and Cultivated I
I
Grasses I Green for Hay IS'wn for Forage I Corn
I
I
l
I Stalks
()
l"l
0
Counties
I I I I I Acres !I Tons
Acres II Tons
A IiT II Acres II Tons II Acres II
-
Tons
I I
Acres
I I
Tons
Acres
Tons II Tons
::>:1
>C"l
-----
tj
-- -~~~ == == Fayette _________
Floyd ___________ Forsyth _________
-----295
------
383
-----426 138
------1 --1-541 --~--
------
108
-----165
Franklin ________
Fulton __________
31
53
218
I 409 __ 1 __
76l 1011
Gilmer __________ Glascock ________ .Glynn________ : __ Gordon _________
537 418
------ ------ -- 560
2
31--I --
12
191
--1------~------1
------ ------ -- --1------ ------
507
46
70 -- --1 38
38
2661 1,422
798 1,198
1,0191 230
2~1
3341
3251 1,451 1,046 1,293
17 1,298
611 525
321 ------- -------
1,233
356
621
745
36
22
591
289
524
1,J~31 -- -~~!~----~~~~ ~===~~~~ ====~~~
26
13
50
498
97il 1,26:1 196
263
876 l"l
1,913 1,416
...,"><l
::>:1
997 ~
614 l.z.".,l
1,690
4 0
2
"1
787 >
Greene__________ ______ ______
4
13 ____
Gwinnett________
42
48 ____________ --~--
Habersham______
2
2 ________________
HalL___________
16
19 ____________ ~- __
Hancock ______________ ------
36
69 --~--
20 4
I
I
I
25 1,2061 1,202
225
221
481
336
10
4151
371 1,038 1,296
338
603
179
201
283 38
356 44
1,552412!
2,125 507
763 1,089
127
95
386
376 ------- -------
C"l
1,439
::>:1
1-<
3,177 652
()
t~..".',
582 1,928
~ ::>:1
l"l
Haralson________
33
44
1
1~--~--
Harris__________
21
22
11
10 ____
--I -- Hart____________
33
35 ______ ------~-- __
H'lard __________________ -- __
58 105
Henry----------
1
1 ______ ------ ____
-
I
------1
2 ____ J
1721 317 568
18
180 392
628 31
------1
422
403
149
67 448 108 375
152
60 363 132 371
42
209 589 138
63
46
196
470
422
868
666
57741
1,073 1,36ti
I
!
Houston. _______ _ Irwin __________ _ Jack8on ________ _ Jasper _________ _
Jefferson _______ _
4931 19
5 36
17 17
71--1--1------1------1
181__ --1
1
1
~ -----~ 23 20
401 =__=I\ =--=i =-=--=-=-=-=f =--=----=--:j'
Johnson________ _
I
JLoaunreesn-s-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_--_ Lee____________ _ Liberty--- __ ----
---- j ---- -~ 21 10\
1
=1=1i ~-=-=-=-=-=-i ------1
------1------ Lincoln _________
Lowndes ______ -Lumpkin _______ _
-----32
-----37
McDuffie _______ _
Mcintosh_______ _
1 2\ --\ --1------ ______ ,
420
302, -- --~------ ------
6 3
361 ----, ---- ------------ _-_-_-_-_-_- ,
-- ------
- - - - - - --~------
--1 Macon __________ \ _____ _
Madison_________
1
------1
2
Marion ________
2
5
21
_J 1 --1------1------1 _-_-,1_-_-_-_-_-_- ------------1
Meriwether______
19
32
Miller __________ _
2
4 -- ------ ------- ------ ------
Milton _________ _ MitchelL _______ _
Monroe - -- __ -- --
. I
I
.
------\
5\-----8
-----2~/\----is2(
--) --( ==I==
-----======
------1
======\
Montgomery ____ _ Morgan ________ _
== ====I == == 3~ 3gl
Murray ________ _ 583 461 Muscogee_______ _ 233 204 Newton _______ - 210 117 Oconee_________ _ 130 156 Oglethorpe _____ _
81 28 23 106
85 -- -- 118 1021 34 -- -- ------ ------,
------1 33 -- - ------ ------
IS7 _1___5__--_-_-_-_- _____ _
5653441 1,9821
303 501
59 67 161 34
202831
2435061 23
I
32\ .562\ 111 691 10
103 98 366 404 1,0611
554 732 671 99, 1,1131
4411 772 1,7971 254 47
66 67 210 38
31 224 503 258 31
29 621 79 801
20
115 89 380 342 1,130
551 806 709
61 1,397
263 498 1,289 218 274
110 4 21
40 87
17 467 118 163
25
138 103 75 367
1,606 19
266 166 519
94\l 132 443 1,234 39
3169041
1137701
1,6i~2~3~
----
901
-si\
97
1
5
28
31
3
74
421'
66 168
I
24 115
517
217
109
25
130
2
14
157
150
112 686
78
46
352 523
731 152 1,200
33
1 88 10 104 200
i
149 338
25 2
122 1,477
85 432
1,769 12
286 173 483
917
134 388 790
641
77 174
1,090
321 243 187 732 126
57 186
1,814
298 236 246 446 166
1.759 1,228 1,450 1,742
2,779
536 91-5 1,319 94!l 734
~ 803 m
570
"601 605
H
(..f.).
120
H ()
~(f)
i,612 fool
234
<:C>
1,269
0 00
1,123
I
fool
194
<:C>
0
<:C>
899
865
1,133
627
1,923
810
596 1,580
966 1,039 ~
Ol
ACREAGE AND PRODUCTION OF SPECIFIED CLASSES OF HAY AND FORAGE IN 1899, BY COUNTIES.
c~:.
(U. S. Census of 1900).
Counties
1
I Wild, Salt and Millet and Hun jAlfal-1
Prairie Grasses garian Grasses Lfauco'nr\
I
I
Clover
I I
I Other Tame
I
. Grams Cut
I I
Forage Crops
II and Cultivated Grasses \ Green for Hay
I jS'wn for Forage I
Corn
I
I Stalks
() M 0 ::0
I I I I / Acres Tons Acres / Tons IIA /T Acres Tons Acres Tons Acres Tons Acres Tons I Tons
>0>-<
Paulding ________ Pickens _________ Pierce___________
2
25
27 -- __,
1
Pike ____________ P!lk __ - ________
10 58
10 60
17 22 76 128
1 1
1
t1
1 1
207 97
228 107
180 134
315 97
183811
381 29
814 147
M
>'"tl
105 188
62 166
858 117
633 158
108
135
278 1,346
:.:.0.; ~
3
866
908
406
637
140
164
1,580 Mz
Pulaski _________ Putnam _________
5
7
171 17
Quitman ________ Rabun __________ Randolph _______
-- -- --1-- -- ------- ------
24
13 ::/::::::/::::::1
60 653
69 725
-==-
-----~1 6
----~~~ 81
7 621
3171
6 65 350
862 62
33 63
626
67
49
2,273 ...;
40 266 207
938 g
1
II
772
49! 2811 607
281' >-
50
220
189 1,755 0
::0
Richmond _______ Rockdale ________ Schley __________ Screven _________ Spalding ________
48 2 1
49 1 1
20
1 3
I
45
31
31 1,245 1,943 2,454 2,330
355
329
141
153
-- ------, ------ 781 542
24
26
~I=~
557 718
5499481
136 79
156 91
172 239
10
4
>-<
183 159
14
450 412 94 l.J.742
()
c::
"...;
c::
::0
112
893 M
I .I
I
SSutemwtaerr_t.__--_-_-_-_-_-_-_1_-_-_-_--_-_1_-_-_-_-_-_-
Talbot_ _________
2
1
Talil!,ferro _______
TattnalL ________ -- -- -- ------1
31 191
101--1--1------1------
111--1--1
31
2
11,,0039641
22~1 2511 __ , __ , ______ , ------.
4-- -- ------ ------
529 1301
151 101 --1 --1 ------1 ------1 1551
770 848 491 114 1551
91 829 152
20
1251
107 499 151
5 1021
172 172 116
87
211 1,318
94 ],474
140
221
447
51 1,786
Taylor __________ !------
Telfair__________ ____ --
Terrell__________
1
Thoma~<---------
1
Towns__________
24
Troup___________ 147
TV~iggs_- _______ _
Unil)n ___ ~- __ __ __
64
Upson---------Walker__________ 126
Walton--------Ware____________
139
Warren---------
3
Washington-----
Wayne_________ _
Webster________ _
White___________
64
Whitfield________ 414
Wilcox_________ _
Wilkes__________
99
Wilkinson ______ _
Worth __ __ __ __ __ 120
10
2L--
2
1 15
2~ ~~~~~~I ~~
485 279
45
46
361
341
1,182 902
20
17
l
188
1
1 --1------
1,993 2,522
--1 38
---------~-~~---------~-~
--
-::/
-----------~
131 372 497 --
3511
10 404"
1
247 94 8651
1
399 121 884
I
1~. ------
-i, __ -- 1
-~~~ -~~~~
912; 7
966 8
11
25:
29) -- :: ---- ~~ ---- -~1
11 390
13 407
69
2
4
353 349 406
80
59
113
109
3
5
108
125
157 130 1,040 1,919
2
3
65
61 11
96
3~1
1 25
86
85
682 671
58
57
617 434
711 32 16 40 25
237 16 302 80 430
386 71 31 445
3 79 391 1,193
27 827
11 6
42 24 28 46 25
368 19
260 68 44e
469 40 45
293
3 45 474 1,310
36 752
11 81
12
231
1
1
140 154
300 343
42
63
280 435
59
31
23
15
583 8021
142 146
13
9
208 212 699 1,065
26
21
231 235
55
46
501
48
784 505 1,731 1,634 835
806 664 551 1,403 938
1,356 274 855
3,066
758 523 887 848
366 1,487
798 1,19!!
Table 26.-ACREAGE AND PRODUCTION OF POTATOES, SWEET POTATOES, ONIONS, AND MISCELLANEOUS VEGETABLES IN 1899, AND SQUARE FEET OF LAND UNDER GLASS USED FOR AGRICULTURE JUNE 1, 1900,
BY COUNTIES. (U. S. Census of 1900).
Potatoes
Sweet Potatoes
Onions
Miscellaneous Vegetables
Counties
) Acres
I I I
Bushels
I I I
Acres
I ! Bushels Acres Bushels! Acres Value
The State _______________________ / 8,477 553,120
I I 70,620 5,087,674
418
I
1
44,618
I
1
73,489
$3,009,306
Square feet of land un der glass
488,940
~~k~~~~ 9
Baldwin=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=__==__==__==__==__=_= _=_= _=_= _=_= _==_
17 27
Banks _________________________ -----Bartow _____________________________ _
25 27
Berrien _____________________________ _ 20
BBribobo_k_s_______--__--__--__--__-_- _-_- _-_- _-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_--_ Bryan _________________________ -- ---Bulloch _____________________________ _
76 33 96 95
Burke________________________ -- __ -- __ 63
Butts ______________ -~ _______________ _ 31
Calhoun_. ___________________________ _ 86
Camden ________________ ------------ --1 11
CampbelL ___________________________ _
1
Carroll___________________ _________ _ 80 Catoosa -------------- -~-- -------- --~- 69
440 1,301 1,011 1,511 1,720
1
809 3,471 2,094 8,680 6,001
4,184 1,742 6,775
634 41
6,313 3,800
734 363 700 317 251
2,016 989
1,136 352
1,105
1,234 237 471 571 286
959 279
62,189 I
2
37,545
2
44,898
11
24,424
5
20,953
1
125,592
2
50,364
20
86,549
1
30,460
1
84,542
2
I
79,482
4
13,730
34,001
60,358
1
19,658
2
52,781 (1)
21,936
1
98 317 1,715 604 79
233 1,982
95 24 188
216
38 345
41 20
573 317 485 346 431
960 1,141 2,158
365 1,126
1,127 479 201 188 510
629 305
21,462 15,295 23,427 16,700 22,946
35,521 52,771 59,205 12,250
35,303
25,960 2,000
37,531
12,380 8,798
10,284
15,416
350 1,500
---- --4~~~~
37,346 ---------16,759 1
Charlton _____________________________ , 25
1,890
Chatham _____________________ -- ____ -- 1,259 125,375
Chattahoochee ________________ -- ______ 59 3,577
I 395
680 168
Chattooga ___________________________
58
3,180
172
Cherokee __7 ___________________________
27
1,370
294
Clarke _______________________ ---,-- -- 14
458
166
2l!~t~~ ~= 1 8 == == == == == == == == == == == == == ==
30 553
297 302
Clinch _______________________________ CCoofbfbe e -_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_ -_ -_ -_ _- _- _- _- _- _- _- _- _-
I 5
299
39 1,725
75 4,830
559 866 861
Colquitt_____ - ________________ -------- 121 8,122
1)18
Columbia_____________________________ 112 5,032
477
Coweta_________________ -------------- 44 Crawford _____________________ -- ______ 16
Dade __________ ---- __ ---------------- 98 Dawson ________________ -------------- 12 Decatur ________________ -------------- 142
DeKalb ______ ---- __ ------------ ---- -- 49
DDooodlyg_e_-_-_-_-_-_._-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_--_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-
20 25
Dougherty______________ -------- ____ -- 38
Douglas ______________________ -- ______ 27
2,551 801
5,048
506
I 8,096
2,988
897 927
1,723 2,258
230 396
)
73 I
157
1,604
785 610
1,300 357 249
Early __________ -- ____ ---------------- 25
825
Echols __ -.-- ____________ ---- __ --------
3
175
Effingham ____________________ -------- 427 32,758
Elbert _________________ -------------- 15
812
EmanueL ________ -- ____ -------------- 32 2,131
519 177 617 230 1,074
Fannin __________________ -- ____ --------
:Fayette ______
--------------
183 1
I 11,870 55
1152291
56,799 (1)
50,748
24
9,691
14,822
1
20,7.04
2
8,842
1
23,063
24,766
6
57,506 76,231
60,161 42,131 24,504
(1) 10
(1)
3 2
17,175
3
23,337
1
5,366
7
12,844
2
93,937
1
63,759
10
40,519
3
94,342
10
25,627
2
21,464
1
31,965 16,692
',
------
41,239 (1)
16,589 (1)
78,263
4
10,289 I
4
I 10,~50 ------
10 2,786
91 162 101
520
8 906
4 271 97
268 47
865 195
47
1,234 246
1,103 105 121
4 43 573
869
307 1,6,80
223
388 269 380 140 471
199 1,176
217 320 577
488 444 218 418 373
713 421 670 853 249
61 13 342 253 614
313 141
9,871 ----------
106,354
106,350
10,024 ----------
17,138
1,900
13,122 ----------
10,024 ----------
4,157 ----------
24,636 ----------
I
9,067 ----------
I 46,500
20,100
7,752 ----------
w...;.
14,753 ---------l5,337 ----------
.>..;
>-<
(f)
...;
21,141 18,046
300
>-<
('")
120 Y'
11,139 ----------
12,030 ----------
1--J.
<:o
17,344 ----------
0 00
I
38,893
4,740
1--J.
<:o
17,404 ----------
0 <:o
32,037 ----------
24,981 ----------
18,959 ----------
3,361 ----------
477 ---------+
14,286 ----------
10,929 19,968
,I
------.----
150
12,880 I ---------7,768 I ----------
<:o <:o
ACREAGE AND PRODUCTION OF POTATOES. SWEET POTATOES, ONIONS, AND MISCELLANEOUS VEG-
~
0
ETABLES IN 1899, AND SQUARE FEET OF LAND UNDER GLASS USED FOR AGRICULTURE JUNE I, 1900, 0
BY COUNTIES. cu. S. Census of 1900).
Counties
r I Potatoes
Sweet Potatoes
I Acres II Bushels II Acres ) Bushels
1 I
I
Onions
f
I Miscellaneous
Vegetables
Acres 1 Bushels\ Acres 1 Value
1
\ Square feet of land under glass
0 ~
\
iiO:f
> 0
Floyd ____________ -------------------Forsyth __________________________ .-- __ Franklin ____________________________ _
Fulton _______________________ ~- _____ _ Gilmer ______________________________ _ Glascock ____________________________ _
g~~~~-== == == == == == == == == == == == == == ==
Greene ______________________________ _ Gwinnett___________________________ -Habersham __________________________ _ lialL _______________________________ _ .Hancock ____________________________ _
Haralson ___ -------------------------Harris _____ -------------------------Hart__ -----------------------------,.Heard _-----------------------------Henry_------------------------------ I
j!~i!t_o~-= == ====== ==== ==::::::==::== ==/
116 15 9
53 167
9 99 23
44 46 35 16 54
.12
81 10 34 93
40 43 1
5,829 503 403
2,918 9,801
835 5,331 1,124
l. 79.3 2,940 1,754
686 3,080
1,037 5,854
713 1,711 8,015
1
1,7421 1,774
425 235
3173,,6072481
9 2,064
2
255
435
37,376
2
329
723
45,541
201
16,361
83
8,510
243
20,334
110
9,147
31 4,169
5
624
1
31
1
104
1
86
553
27,886 I (1)
19
910
63,207
4
487
196
15,177
7
484
393
30,039
2
147
997
73,604
2
296
201
14,420
676
38,283
l ~
105 160
346 313 I
I 250 I 1,109
1,403
23,524
26,805 17,824
I (1)
60,457 103,721
~ I
2 3'
148 216
14
157 351
883 260 663
I I
1,507 610 76 154 216
688 935 373 329 683
290 820 525 287 434
I
1,3981 244
40,994
1,010 t:'
12,541 22,088
!'!
>"'
I 80.021
1.79.250
~ is:
25,751
230
2,248 ----------
1~:U~ J--------iio
zl"}
~
~
I 24,986
> 32o
35,3881 14,713
200 1,500
0 I..."..
12,202
7,130
(c:):
24,761 '----------
~
c::
14,927
480 ~"'
33,158
!'!
21,799
13,917
17,232
38,511
240
11,372
450
Jacksofr------------------------------ 30 1,978
JJeafsfeprseorn__-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_--_-_-_-_-_-:-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-
--
~-
-_-_
17 66
1,044 4,683
399
28,977
1
80
733
320 507
I 25,344
39,011
1 2
132 269
591 770
25,736 I----------
30,574 ---------25,684 ----------
JJoonhens _s_o_n_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_--_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-
5 -i9
197 1,902
545
47,460
683
37,067
1
70
568
2
112
508
22,879 ----------
18,327 ----------
Laurens-- ________________ ---------- --1 52 3,593
741
58,838
1
70
212
7,377- ----------
Lee. _____ ---------------------------- 45 Liberty _-- -- ----- -- ---- -- ---- -- -- ---- 278
Lincoln -- __ -- -- -- ---- ---- -- -- -- -- ---- 12
LLouwmnpdkeisn-. -_-__--__________--__-_- _-_- _-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_McDuffie ___________________________ -Mcintosh_____________________________
171 51
10 12
MMaadcisoonn ___-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_- _- -_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-
17 13
Marion.-- __ -----------------------Meriwether_------------------------
----1
7 63
Miller __ ---------------------------- --1 30
Milton_-- _________________ --- ______ -- 1T
Mitchell ___________________ ----------- 21
MMoonnrtogeom__e_ry______________-_-_-_________-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-
44 25
2,248 11,025
611 10,099
2,177 414 755
996 482 298 5.476 1,750
1,209 1,751
2,103 I
1 653
421 648
151 786 208 541 547
437 127 I 527 r 717 199
213 500 767 761
22,604
50,475
2
146
I I
9,508 (1) 54,555
1
5 62
I 15,036
2
32,262 (1) 41,265
2
148 34
238
33,382 \
I 8,052 !
32.035 52,900
(1)
17,936
17,874
2 1
I 300 99
4 I
I I
20
2
146
2
191
45,377 -- _.... -- ------
I 47,066 (1)
17
58,764
4
458
818 419
134 $ 905 302 430 251
450 I
384
346 I
662 49
246 872 901 665
32,768 ---------18,829 ----------
5,726
27,725 12,297 10,984 13,146
----------
---- -- -- --
----------------------------
18,280
14,929 17,231
I==========
30,367 ----------
1,474 ----------
8,053 ----------
18,965 ----------
38,898
80
31,120 ----------
U..., l .:>..-, .(.....f.....l,
(')
!:!'
"<";:">'
0 00
I
<""0"'
0 <0
Morgan ___________________ ----- ____ -- 54 2,495
471
28,595 (I)
11
548
23,323 ----------
Murray ______________________________ 47
Muscogee__________________ -- _________ Newton ______________________________
95 32
Oconee-- ____________ ---- __ ---- ___ ---Oglethorpe ________________ -- _________
6 46
Paulding--------------------------- --1 Pir.kens ------------------------------1
105 11
I
2,199 5,723 2,575
220 3,860
9,106 577
133 732 439 115 468
236 126
8,179 47,763
33,479 5,433
29,220
2
173
141
13
854
594
1
150
751
294
2
252
967
6,982 35,790 44,507
9,603 33,038
---------4,640
180
--------.------------
I
17,817 II 9,90:l
I 1---------- 3
3
I 300
558 $ 24,462
290
165
6,555 ----------
"0""' """'
ACREAGE AND PRODUCTION OF POTATOES, SWEET POTATOES, ONION, AND MISCELLANEOUS VEG- 1-'
ETABLES IN 1899, AND SQUARE FEET OF LAND UNDER _GLASS USED FOR AGRICULTURE JUNE 1, 1900,
0
():)
BY COUNTIES. (U. S. Census of 1900).
Potatoes
Sweet Potatoes
Onions
l .
I
Miscellaneous
Counties
I ~ Acres Bushels /
1
Pierce ________________________________ .I PPoiklke _______________________-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_--_
I 5440
2,928 2,315
37 I 1,838
Pulaski __________________________ -- __
PQuutintmaman: ___________________-_--_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_--_ Rabun _____________________ - _____ - __ -
14 .
8 21 118
809 384 1,297
5,974
Acres II I
689 467 199
699 300 175 125
Bushels
I
IVegetables
Acres Bushels\ Acres Value
\
Square feet
I of land un-
I der glass
I 58,920
1
37
73
2,529
400
33,505
3
213
599
22,208
16,201
1
57
383
25,345
I
42,447
1
41
824
24,620
16,345
571
24,786
16,293
2
198
146
5,770
9,480
16 1,647
289
16,573
() l'i
>~....
tj
l'i
">d
~
>-i ~
Iz'!
>-i
Randolph ____________ ---------------- 38 '--
1,935
723
46,462
565
28,?71
~
Richmond ________ -------------------- 127
Rockdale___ -- ______ ------------------ 47
Schley ___ "- ____ ----------------------
9
Screven __________________.__ -- ____ -- __ Spalding ____________________________ _
54 64
Stewart ____________ ------------------ 91 Sumter_____________________ -- ____ -- __ 22
6,842 4,434
699 3,003 2,837
3,576 904
865
50,952
39 3,589 1,527
170 234
14,994 15,146
I (1)
2
154
277
10
199
723
52,364
1
37
956
217
14,581
1
117
313
I
651 861
42,8571 60,071
1
27
621
5
434 1,013
47,105 12,282
8,056 39,812 14,375
27,461 39,018
111,680
>
0
.~...
(")
710
c::
~
~
l'i
Talbot __________ --------------------- 21 Taliaferro __________ ------------------ 18 'TattnalL ____________________________ _ 42
1,066 902
1,934
453 263 1,190
I 24,837
16,977
1 1
86,564
2
33
435
99
380
179 483.
14,787 18,323 50,235
450 180
:f:rr~i~ 21
432
35 2,215
==== == == === == == == == == == == == == ==
3351.
I 21,863
1
87
318
428
38,392 1
7
662
306
11,300 11,683
500
TerrelL ____________________________ - 103
Thomas __ ~- ________________________ --Towns _______________________________
349 47
Troup___ - ______ ----- __ ---------------- 38
Twiggs_________ ~ ____________________ _ Union_______________________________ _ Upson ______________________________ _
Walker______________________________ _
7 103
4 176
Walton _____________________________ _ Ware _______________________________ _ Warren _____________________________ _
Washington _________________________ _
15 21 90 103
Wayne___________________ -- -- -- -- -- -- 40
Webster__________________ ------------
5
White____________________ ------------ 24
Whitfield _________________ ------ ____ -- 184
Wilcox_______________ -------------- --1
7
Wilkes ________________ - -- -- -- -- -- -- - -~ 25
Wilkinson __________________________ -- 15
Worth ___________________ -- -- -- -- -- -- 84
(1) Less than an acre.
166,,527288 r 2,717
1,968 393
5,986 109
12,516
1,6678971 34
552 264 119 475 312
42,8641 112,732
1 I 131
1
112
2,390
1
95
41,1761I
16,445
3 1
360 22
9,187
3
453
25,774 1)
2
24,442
21 2,025
825
1,256 4,882 .
6,959
536 778 697 1,094
36,079 f
60,866 39,791 88,363
1
86
1
38
3
487
4
420
5,006
905
96 718
------
223
172
10,527 (1)
4
1,355
237
19,990
3
342
10,170
361
28,521
3
438
176
730
51,613
947
423
26,510
669
555
34,308
5,392
921
71,883
----------
1
-- -- --
1 2
107 -- -- --
47 280
- 418 2,100
101
661 215 245 299 710
583 530 714 1,392
366 164 324 528
333 625 762 1,260
17,304 ----------
61,046
8,500
6,059 ----------
27,849
6,101 12,959 11,617 34,423
120
-------------------
130 5,160
26,563 ----------
19,682 ----------
27,197 ----------
57,233
80
16,956 -- -- -- -- --
7,913 ----------
en
s ~
.....
()
12,420 ---------- Y'
24,939 ----------
1-'
<0
6,278 ----------
34,062- -- -- -- -- --
24,375 -- -- -- -- --
41,581
700
0 00
I
1-'
<0 0 <0
1-' 0
~
104
GEORGIA DEPAR'I'MEN'I' OF AGRICl)'L'I'URE
ACREAGE, TONS SOLD, AND PRODUCTS, MADE ON FARMS, OF SUGAR CANE IN GEORGIA IN 1899. (U. S. Census of 1900).
COUNTIES
SUGAR CANE AND PRODUCTS
I I Acres \ Tons .Gallons of Pounds of
sold
Syrup
Sugar
Total for State_-- __ -------- --1 26,056 1 18,868 I 3,226,367 1 226,730
Appling ______________ ---------Baker_________________________ _
Baldwin___ - __ -----------------Berrien_ .. ______________ --------
Bibb___ - ____ -----------------Brooks ________ ---------------Bryan _________________ -------Bulloch _______________________ _
Burke ___________ -- __ ------ ---Butts __ ~- ________ -- __ ---------Calhoun ____________________ -- __ Camden_______________________ _ CampbelL _____________________ _
CarrolL ________________ -------Charlton _______________ -------Chatham. __________________ ---Chattahoochee _________________ _ Clay __________________________ _ Clavton _______________________ _
Clh:i.ch _________________ -------Coffee________________ ---------Colquitt_______________________ _
Columbia______________________ _ Coweta ____________________ ---Crawford______________________ _ Decatur_______________________ _ DeKalb _______________________ _
Dodge _______________ ---------Dooly_________________________ _
Dougherty ____________________ _ Douglas_______________________ _ Early _________________________ _ Echols ________________________ _ Effingham_____________________ _ EmanueL ____________________ -Fayette _______________________ _ Glascock ______________________ _ Glynn ________________________ _ Greene________________________ _ Gwinnett_ _____________________ _ Hancock ______________________ _ Harris ________________________ ..
Heard _________________ -- __ ---Henry _____________________ "- __ Houston ______________________ _ Irwin _________________________ _ Jasper _______________________ -Jefferson ______________________ -/ Johnson_______________________ _
336 280
61
509 88
995 131
947 331
35 254 144
10 26 48
87
91 162
32
311 196 475
56 119
68 1,917
15 222
505 126
62 224
161 522
706
6 35 61 19 12
76 484
50 26
311 269
33 389 252
47 53 55 49 145 82 643 199 330 1
-
27 24
147 86 41 13 18
1,349 708 16 51 46 494 4 136 304 472
40
748 147
30
142 33
49 9 10 52 1,398 9
I 1
35648
47,109
3,900
26,264 ----------
3,$18 ----------
60,900
39,120
8,117
20
175,926
8,100
1,170
2,310
123,269
27,190
33,644
1,100
5,014 -- ---- -- --
23,924 ----------
24,708
950
310
150
2,810
500
8,121
3,150
12,653'
620
6,193 ----------
17,260 ----------
2,726 -- -- -- -- --
50,691
11,810
1,465 ----------
41,252
4,500
4,476 11,506
--------------------
6,334
800
319,983
4,260
764
1,510
23,542
200
55,807
300
7,302 ---------5,414 ---- ....... ----
28,900
140
17,038
2,050
43,825
13,050
92,590
6,320
222
80
4,360 ----------
4,486
2,400
1,779 ----------
918
500
6,067 ----------
66,307
500
6,036 ........ __ -- ----
1,663 ----------
20,718 ----------
47,160
3,380
4,846
100
34,2461
60
36,716
900
STATISTICS, 1908-1909
105
ACREAGE, TONS SOLD, AND PRODUCTS, MADE ON FARMS OF SUGAR CANE IN GEORGIA IN 1899. (U.S. Census of 1900).
COUNTIES
Jones __________________________ Laurens. ___________ ~- __ - ______ Lee____________________________ Liberty ________________________ Lincoln ________________________ Lowndes. ______________________ McDuffie _______________________ Mcintosh_______________________ Macon _________________________ Marion _________________________
MMielrleiwr_e_t_h_e_r ___________________________-'-__-_-_-_-_-_MitchelL _______________________ Monroe ________________________ Montgomery. ___________________ Morgan. _______________________ Muscogee_________________ -- ____ Newton ________________________ Oglethorpe. ____________________ Paulding _______________________ Pierce ___________ ---- __________ Pike ___________________________ Pulaski ________________________ Putnam. _______________________ Quitman _______________________ Randolph. _____________________ Richmond. _________ -- __________ Rockdale. _____________________ Schley ___________ ---- __________ Screven ____________ -- __________ Spalding _______________________ Stewart ________________________ Sumter ____________ -- __________
TTaaltbtnoat.l_L______________-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_~_-_-_--_-_-_-_ Tafrlor _____________________ ~- __ Te fair _________________________ TerrelL ________________________ Thomas ____________ -- ________ -Troup!- ________________ -------Twiggs.. ___ --. __________________
~~~~~ ~= Warren ___=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=
Washington._~--- __ -- ________ --
Wwse.r;sntee.r---_-__-_-_-_-_-_-_------_-_-_-_-_-_-_-__-_-
Wilcox __ -- ______ -- __ ~Wilkes- __ -~ ____ --------
WWilokirntsho.n-------_-_------------------------__-----
SUGAR CANE AND PRODUCTS
Acres
I Tons Gallons of Pounds of
I sold
Syrup
Sugar
85 371 145 430
4
389 165 159 266
360 411
197 543
236
566 41
205
33 10 32
86 335 210
48
7 237
59 38 136
539 53
315
393 347 539
171 290 416 2,058 288
42
186 220
41
688 211 I
70 163
43 295
569
28 1,806
144 164
45 30 90 49
1
1
525 63
234
384 1,463
104 16 26
122 59
49 64 25 470 133 205 558 428 84 1,062 376 100 56 14 197 25 12 26 41 21 21 107 810
9,060 15,703 15,601 42,716
411 6 ',283
9.317 20,550 34,710
44,109 40,835 22,347
76,571 25,866 74,133
5,070 16,604
3,625 1,260
4,571
3,386 13,354
22,056 6,036 150
31.050 3',886
3,780 13,896 88,186
6,631
38,577 44,478 34,994
58,900 17,513 28,638
38,769 361,463
25,710
2,900 32,652
38,871 2,864
84,203
30,671 7,232
17,364 2,925
36,425 67,117
----------
1,050
---------2,580 500 23,210
-------------------
140 1,300
900 100 2,120 120 5,150
---------1,110
----------
----------------------------
250 170
----------
---------150
----------------------------
5,160
----------------------------
1,200 20,750
1,240 1,650
80 7,380
----------
-------------------
1,100 250 140
7,660
------------------------1----,----~----0----0
106
GEORGIA DSPAR'I'MEN'I' OF AGRICULTURE
Table 2!.-ACREAGE, TONS SOLD, AND PRODUCTS, MADE ON FARMS OF, SORGHUM CANE IN GEORGIA IN 1899.
COUNTIES
SORGHUM CANE AND PRODUCTS
I Acres I Tons Gallons of
Sold
Syrup
----------------------- Total for State-----------------------1
Bald win_________________________________ _ Banks __________________________________ _
11,553 I 5,576 I
8
9
172
12
767,024
334 12,211
Bartow _________________________________ _
221
59
14:,994
Burke __________________________________ _
8
Butts ______________________________ ------
92
32 ---------
56
3,206
CampbelL _______________________________ _ CarrolL _________________________________ _
Catoosa _________________________________ _ Chattooga _______________________________ _
189
197
491
103'
126 --------
172
147
10,494
36,452 10,368 10,579
Cherokee ________________________________ _
175
13
13,060
Clarke __________________________________ _
38
10
2,156
Clayton _________________________________ _ Cobb ___________________________________ _
114 378
19
8,238
21
28,934
Coffee___________________________________ _
1
1 ---------
CCooweltuam-~b--ia_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_--_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_--_
20 94
6
1,213
5.1
6,071
Dade _____________________________ - _____ _
22
5
1,633
Dawson _____'____________________________ _
163
5
12,473
DeKalb ________________________________ -'Dooly_______________ ___________________ _
223 4
19 11
,_ ___1_6_,_0_9_2
Dougherty ______________________________ _
Douglas__________ ~- _____________________ _ Elbert __________________________________ _
6
49 ---------
191 135
------46
15,710 8,952
Fannin__________________________________ _
134
166
7,498
Fayette _________________________________ _ Fldyd__________________________ ---- ____ --
60 313
217
743
50
27,013
Forsyth __________ - _____________________ _
251
2
20,167
Franklin ________________________________ _
332
47
22,708
f~WE : ---=: -; Gwinnett_________________________________
Habersham ______________________________ _ HalL __________________________ -- ______ --
170
59
313
149
10 --------
213
84
52
8
362
16
1143181
13 17
10;867 23,142
703 15,616 . 2,897
27,999 10,130 11,673
Hancock _________ c ___________ -~-- _______ _
126
42
8,494
~:~~l:~~=~=~-=~= ~= Hart____________==__==__==__==__==__==__==__==__=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_ _
Heard___________________________________ _ Henry __________________________________ _ Houston ________________________________ _ Jackson ________________ :_-" _____________ _ Jasper __________________________________ _ Jefferson ________________________________ _
234
91 225
387 80 24
251
98 24
33
18,542
55
5,758
180
13,720
4
27,023
283
3,517
112
68
202
12,727
30
7,454
46
603
LJoanuersen_s__________________________________-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_--_
24 3
31
1,239
2
99
STATISTICS, 1908-1909
107
ACREAGE, TONS SOLD, AND PRODUCTS, MADE ON FARMS OF SORGHUM CANE IN GEORGIA IN 1899.
COUNTIES
Liberty ______________________________ ---Lincoln _________________________________ _ Lumpkin_______________________ ---------McDuffie __________________ -------------Macon ___________________________________ _ Madison_________________________________ _ Marion__________________________________ _ Meriwether ______________________________ _ Milton __________________________________ _ MitchelL ________________________________ _ Monroe ______________________ -----------Montgomery__________________________ ---Morgan _________________________________ _ Murray _________________________________ _ Muscogee________________________________ _
~::;~:_== Oglethorpe==__==__==__=_= _=_= _=_= _=_= _=_= _=_= _=_= _=_= _=_= _=_=_=_= _=_=_==_I
Paulding ________________________________ _ Pickens ______________________________ c __ _
Pike _________ ---------------------------Polk____________________________________ _ Pulaski __________________________________ _ Putnam_________________________________ _ Rabun __________________________________ _ Randolph _______________________________ _ Richmond_______________________________ _ Rockdale________________________________ _ Spalding ________________________________ _ Stewart ________________________ ---- _____ _ Sumter _________________________________ _ Talbot __________________________________ _ Taliaferro _______________________________ _ Taylor __________________________________ _ Towns __________________________________ _ Troup __________________________________ _
~~f~~s= ==================================\
;~E~ ~ Warren _=_==_=__=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_=_ _
Washington __________________________ -- __
;:h:t':;r==== =~ White _____==__==__==__=_=_=_=_=_=_==__=_=_=_=_=_=__ -==- _==__=_= -==-
Whitfield-- ___________________ ------ __ ---Wilcox__________________________________ _ Wilkes __________________________________ _
-wilkinson ______________ ------------------
SORGHUM CANE AND PRODUCTS
Acres
Tons \Gallons of
Sold
Syrup
7
4
486
149 --------
8,625
99
75
6,046
42
38
2,148
3
2
70
24
33
869
9
13
212
148 --------
11,961
148 --------
11,766
6
3
175
97
40
5,942
8 --------
703
62
8
4,984
127
12
10,455
27
30
1,299
187
50
11,461
83
34
3,739
204
382
7,243
351
363
22,034
112
152
6,495
95
245
2,667
186
71
12,953
9
16
40
53
8
4,042
87 --------
6,543
6 --------
24
2
385 1,916
98
2
7,672
24
10
1,422
11
7
460
3
3
150
46
14
1,745
56
25
3,301
1
1 ---------
93
299
2,797
134
68
8,902
5
8
95
208 --------
33
6
15,753 2,211
193
23
15,490
266
54
15,212
193
448
3,152
69
20
3,114
1
2 ---------
1
1 ---------
229
166
15,373
205
95
13,830
1
1 ---------
224
16
17,228
7
7
290
DAIRY PRODUCTS OF FARMS AND RANGES IN 1899 BY COUNTIES (U. S. Census of 1900).
~
0
00
Number
Value of
MILK
rREAM
BUTTER
CHEESE
COUNTIES.
of farms Value of
lreport'g all dairy
dairy
Products.
products I
dairy
products consumed
I on farms.
Gallons
I I Gallons Gallons
produced sold.
sold
Pounds made.
I
I Lb. \cb,~ Pounds
0
sold.
made. /sold.
l'j
0
The State - --- I 146,0441
$5,954,5751
I
$4,925,941 1 82,438,5321 3,920,4121 9,5851 15,111,494 1 2,542,1271 2,2361
62
:<I
0 >
Aprling _________ Ba er___________ Baldwin _________ Banks __________ Bartow _________
Berrien _________ Bibb ____________ Brooks__________ Bryan __________ Bulloch _________
Burke __________ Butts ___________ Calhoun_________ Camden _________ CampbelL __ ~- ___
916 594 664 1,240 1,649
1,387 577
1,213 484
1,594
1,777 1,019
675 601 932
I 40,2541
22,391 50,713 43,534 70,330
47,668 78,213 45,584 17,086 56,123
55,704 42,729 18,840 20,043 41,097.
39,5301 21,010 28,047 38,019 58,249
45,507 19,639 43,302 16,400 54,024
53,481 37,243 18,462 18,127 29,004
375,7021 792,039 342,414 532,872 1,044,479
487,872 870,888 473,696 136,476 672,720
504,431 678,564 171,348 170,626 753,525
2,012 1-- ______ 1
8,229 -- -- -- --
404 --------
106,080
863
7,452
31
9,167 --------
332,119
966
3,408 --------
2,041 --------
2,962 --------
7,110
12,376
104
693 -------11,819 --------
10,834 --------
34,005 159,907
62,648 81,821 235,027
64,837 118,082
76,490 11,230 94,286
58,677 151,308
23,816 10,984 173,066
t:J
1,483 ------ 1----- l'j
30,185 6,474
31,377
------------- -- --
---------
-----
63,787 -- -- -- -----
"'>-
:..<..I; ~
zl'j
3,074 -- -- -- ----- ....;
78,414 ----- ----6,954 ------
0 "!
1,485
20 -----
7,252_ -- -- -- -----
4,716 ------ -----
21,538 -- -- -- -----
1,351 268
__._ ____
-----
>
0
;:<:;I
c:::
t."..".';
c:::
:<I
74,7!5
l'j
Carroll __________ Catoosa ___ c _____
Charlton ________ Chatham __ ~- __ -~ Chattahoochee ___
2,849
738 341
242 406
104,832 30,467 12,583
81,290
13,809
96,921 23,319
11,992 14,459
~1,211
1,665,335
566,780 128,029 517,959 182,248
12,915 --------
2,665 --------
2,842 --------
385,305
382-
20,592 --------
338,954 122,781
11,196 8,933 27,594
43,358 50,541
91 1,842 2,818 I 130
Chattooga _____ --1 Cherokee ________ Clarke __________ Clay ____________ Clayton _________
Clinch___________ Cobb __________ Coffee ___________ Colquitt_________ Columbia ________
Coweta___ - ______ Crawford ________ Dade ___________ Dawson _________ Decatur _________
DeKalb _________ Dodge __________ Dooly___________ Dougherty_______ Douglas _________
Early ___________ Echols __________ Effingham _______ ElberL __________ Emanuel ________
Fannin __________ Fayette _________ Floyd___________ Forsyth _________
Franklin--.------
1,267 1,877
470 613 877
442 2,008
581 765 747
1,7491 741 294 880
2,094
1,658 1,120 1,447
270 967
966 218 532 1,549 1,579
1,448 1,044 1,906
I 1,581
1,950
45,308 62,008 24,508 14,755 55,202
13,589 97,543 26,134 13,941 28,402
63,810 28,875 16,307 24,246 69,309
197,089 58,279 39,668 12,974 38,604
26,819 6,971
19,129 49,242 57,214
31,800 38,467 108,610
I 35,929
65,330
- 39,451 57,791 18,646 13,741 32,344
13,546 71,750 23,864 13,580 24,852
58,700 27,838 13,588 24,074 61,261
66,876 49,853 37,205 11,703 35,687
26,075 6,279
17,937 46,584 55,302
30,134 36,332 73,919
I 34,056
62,820
716,846 1,183,005
323,180 173,770 798,358
132,536 1,581,294
179,698 253,870 442,328
941,152 449,592 271,712 492,600 876,858
2,076,432 799,656 484,136 128,466 637,110
300,666 59,064
206,552 1,003,212
541,632
441,935 619,274 1,423,168 799,476 1,237,8891
13,649 --------
932 --------
10,426
21
2,190 --------
79,184
242
160 --------
93,833
21
6,728 --------
3,306 --------
3,940 --------
13,936 -------204 --------
1,010 -------200 --------
12,439 --------
721,948
30
11,628
61
7,385 --------
3,108 --------
1,010 --------
1,130 -------3,105 -------1,284 -------3,340 -------- 5,338 --------
3,200 --------
1,212 --------
118,656
566
102 ------ .... -
2,412 !-- -- -- -- \
I
.
145,757 268,606
64,790 18,624 164,835
29,593 29,476 21,756
3,832 69,700
3,596 332,052
11,263 27,978 89,383
181,894 86,798 55,233 96,190 134,166
296,357 162,885
67,299 17,068 149,896
42,210 6,827
19,817 215,557
66,512
76 90,5471
1,196 872
15,660
531 52
19,178 5,641
-----------
----------
13,312 ------ -----
1,710 ------ -----
28,166 -- -- -- -----
'(f).
'~"'
j
Ul
r'";'
Y'
131,452 ------ -----
30,753
21 -----
1-'
~
7,754 3,119
-----------
-----
--- --
24,290 1---- __ ,_ ----
0 00
I
1-'
~
0
~
2,588
890 ~------ , _____
4,811 -----16,047 108
4,734
63,756
7,278
128,888
15,685
286,540
92,8131 382
I 164,914
261,686
16,948 ------ ' 17,527 1 162 1- -- --
1-' 0
I
I
<.::
DAIRY PRODUCTS DF FARMS AND RANGES IN 1899 BY COUNTIES (U.S. Census of 1900).
..........
0
MILK
CREAM
BUTTER
CHEESE
Number
Value of
of farms Value of
dairy
COL'NTIES. report'g all dairy
products
dairy
Products. consum!'d
products I
,I on farms.
Gallons produced
Gallons Gallons
sold.
sold
Pounds made.
Pounds Lbs. jLbs. sold. .made. sold.
0
.t>"! 0
I
I
i
!:<:!
8
Fulton __________ I
Gilmer __________
802 1,419
I
185,861 46,611
I
41,844 45,917
1,736,269 831,638
I
768,6811 1,404
I
151 80
1
242,989 151,231
I
ll5,091 3,853
>
t:J
.t>"!
Glascock ________ Glvnn ___________ Gordon __________
401 134 1,634
12,394 12.081 58,065
12,024 6.140 55,687
175,590 67.200 1,091,265
108 -------23,256 --------
2,665 --------
34,431 4,454
251,055
2,032 650
Hi,881
g;'"C
>--0:
~
Greene ______ ~- __ Gwinnett_ _______ Habersham ______ Hall ____________
Hancock ________
1,131 2,772 1,066
1,975 1,241
50,256 102,568
35,569 81,190 48,305
40,982 90,ll8
34,056 75,829 40,319
813,598 1,928,300
562,328 1,215,088
702,416
5,888 --------
9,000 --------
4,857 -------13,454 -------22,338 --------
160,522 393,400 103,191 231,286
143,926
46,238 94,420
6,914 23,210! 153 26,826
!z'1
>--0:
~
>
0
Haralson ________ Harris __________ Hart____________
Heard __________ Henry __________
1,091
1,669 1,566 1,289 1,466
45,662
56,416 50,464 45,375 56,493
42,913 51,151 48,640
45,263 50,647
577,430
8,720 --------
930,1[)0
24,716 --------
920,277
140 --------
641,247 ---------- --------
1,060,6641
12,444 --------
122,042 178,924 169,135 111,133
207,165
9,522
18,845 12,633
865 34,007
!:<:! >-<
()
q
Si
q
!:<:!
.t>"!
Houston ________ Irwin ___________ Jackson _________ Jasper __________
JetTerRon ________
906 816 2,359 1,191
1,1081
30,923 33,288
95,875 43,815 41,432
28,327 29,753 86,201 42,388 39,983
424,683 243,440 1,463,687 674,150 508,921
7,398 -------ll,040 --------
r- ______ 18,698 --------
1,919 -------3,266
80,935 25,350 280,706
125,0221 92,290
7,883 4,358 45,584
6,9391------1-----
4,410 ------1------
Johnson _________ Jones ___________ Laurens _________ Lee_____________ Liberty _______ --
Lincoln _________ Lowndes ______ -Lumpkin ________ .McDuffie ________ Mcii,J.tosh ________
Macon __ - ______ Madison________ Marion __________ Meriwether ______ Miller ___________
M-,i)ton __________ MitchelL ________ Monroe _________ M.ontgomery _____ Morgan _________
Murray ____ --- __ Muscogee ________ Newton _________ Oconee__________ Oglethorpe ______
Paulding ________ Pickens _________ Pierce_________ -Pike ____________ Polk ____________
900 882 1,763 485 1,046
696 1,088
760 654 188
649 1,475
873 1,938
495
901 ~ 1,178 1,490 1,229 1,056
1,011 506
1,329 783
1,412
1,682 948 593
1,284 1,170
28,414 33,471 57,137 15,195 39,476
20,259 43,240 28,284 28,669
7,779
24,620 43,332 35,636 75,529 14,723
38,885 36,116 60,069 .56,701
46,6491
31,873 59,820 58,084 31,561 61,217
52,390 26,835 17,175 56,665 50,818
27,992 25,966 53,278 13,417 37,858
20,037 40,258 27,624 26,243
7,250
23,190 41,401 34,226 71,458 14,109
1
33,748 35,221 53,122 .53,484 39,925
29,453 15,234 48,809 28,188 57,598
49,091 26,641 17,014 50,452 39,991
219,020 540,040 607,496 218,125 320,596
353,576 361,782 294,840 356,468
37,350
382,173 884,848 545,501 1,229,820 107,615
661,502 380,106 951,720 .57.5,92.51 719,775
677,892 579,925 954,200 565,027 830,827
1,026,031 430,440 155,540 917,070 821,308 1
I
545 --------
216 --------
9,452 ------.--
3,938 --------
6,688
94
73 --------
9,940
309
1,326 --------
1,836 --------
1,875 --------
533 -------1,836 -------1,005 -------5,786
2,907
========II
3,939 -------769 --------
7,58.5 -------11,480 -------18,245 --------
4,646 --------
194,291
1,548
40,600 --------
1,910 --------
812 --------
1,609 -------505 --------
1,040 -------17,835 --------
33,027 --------II
26255 113:726
89,018 38,075 31,686
I
73,2591 37,291 56,763 1 71,143
2,955
81,485 173,193 117,300 280,304
2,564
143.555 65,274 217,382 70,402 147,052
149,430 91,854 203,360 114,176 159,488
201,265 83,793 4,620
206,577 169,771
1,27~ '-- ----
39,938 11,384
6,041
1,473
1,288\ 2,915 2,040 10,141
175
42 I ..
I
6,573 ------ -----
13,790
73 - -- --
6,757 ------ --- --
U:; l
.....;.
19,204 ------ ... ---517 ------ -----
.(...f.).;
(")
Y'
39,117 ------ --- --
3,831 ------ - -- --
......
<;;>
31,611 ------ -----
0 00
..I.... 234,427232 --------,------- <;;>
0
1&,251 .
<.:)
60,639
32,930
20,000
19,5791 93
24,157
w\ 10
970 -- ..../... --
31 -- -- --
22,755 441 [----40,895 ------ -----
i
..................
DAIRY PRODUCTS OF FARMS AND RANGES IN 1899 BY COUNTIES (U.S. Census of 1900).
1-' 1-'
~
COUNTIES.
Number
Value of
of farms Value of
dairy
report'g all dairy
products
dairy
Products. - consumed
products I I
II on farms.
MILK
CREAM
Gallons produced
Gallons Gallons
sold.
sold
Pulaski _________ P u t n a m _________ Quitman ________ Rabun __________ Randolph _______
Richmond _______ Rockdale________ .SChley __________ &reven _________ ;spalding ________
'8tewart _________ .Sumter__________ Talbot_------- __ Taliaferro _______ TattnaiL ________
T'11: f t laoi rr -_-__- _- _-_-________ Terrell ______ -- __ Thomas _________ Towns __________
1,111 956 297 846
1,036
372 697 427 1,494 816
1,090 1,198
755 643 1,371
613 672 990 1,974 583
33,5161 49,253 12,119 23,105 33,398
45,239 23,774 15,623 49,068 37,969
34,983 61,155 42,398 23,044 55,295
21,478 27,987 38,102 77,760 17,533
29,225 38,079 11,384 22,708 29,985
20,773 20,073 15,341 48,208 27,979
32,863 48,159 35,840 20,744 52,255
20,237 26,465 36,246 69,433 17,429
383,705
699,898 187,196 417,700
421,065
13,438 -- ---- --
3,442 2,842
103 -------2,100 --------
12,808 --------
361,380
95,667
806
469,700
6,500 --------
177,345 -- -- ---- -- -------.-
589,362
309
82
589,408
46,114 --------
485,169 687,726 621,489
412,146
485,340
2,794 --------
36,239 --------
3,960 --------
207 9,176
----------------
367,395 327,800 482,543
823,928 338,400
4,388 --------
4,725
10
6,792
355
29,224 36
-----....-_--------
BUTTER
CH-EESE
--- --
Pounds made.
Pounds Lbs. Lbs. sold. made. sold.
w
I
~.>....
50,140 158,847
37,323 77,340 42,363
53,808 106,390
31,248 71,741 124,413
90,244 132,655 q7,861 8'7,633
58,418
62,507 56,980 91,985 113,108 62,540
11,030 41,585
3,636 1,290
10,963
-----------------------------
-----
-----------------
t:l
!>!
~
!:>;! ~
a::
9,954 22,850
----
----
---
----------
!z>!
~
1,199 ---- -- -----
3,.646 28,851
64 11
----------
0 "!
~
9,274 30,901 31,175 12,441
4,860
-- -- --
---- --
-------
----
---- --
----------
--------------
~
c()
Sc i
!:>;! !>!
4,731 4,504
-- ----
55
-------_-...
3,386
13,707 770
-- -- --
--------
----
--------------
Troup___________
TUwnioigng..s__..___-_-_-_--_-_-_-
Upson __________ lV.!ker__________
lValton _________ lVare _______ -- -llVVaasrrheinng-t-o-n--_-__-_-_-
lV::e- _____ -- __ lV ater_______ -"White___ -------Whitfield. ____ ---
Wilcox. _______ -Wilkes _________ Wilkinson __ ____ Worth __________
1,387 489
1,259 924
1,611
1,880 457 788
1,713
655 576 829 1,2:t4
737 1,369
836 1,321
68,599 10,616 27,799 34,500 59,131
62,970 22,885 31,566 67,245
22,340 16,401 23,332 54,438
30,523 45,482 27,027 50,305
55,575 10,273 27,700 32,191 52,547
56,303 17,432 29,858
62,340 I
22,173! 16,331 23,185 41,292
28,322 42,514 25,565 44,720
1,060,671 143,999
448,332 631,696 891,040
71,253 -------279 --------
20 -------6,018 --------
14,222 --------
1,119,707 163,704426,510 677,200
20,503 --------
18;924 --------
1,128 --------
14,978
21
188,686
297 --------
182,253 ---------- --------
395,658
160 --------
953,085
42,948 --------
324,232 679,041 370,440 541,360
6,810 --------
8,169 --------
2,184 --------
40,176 ---4----
212,958 18,688 57,653
126,870 158,970
219,022 12,078 98,868
106,590
9,348 26,620 82,503 206,816
48,607 112,700
66,884 79,553
29,232
1,660 772
10,261 32,3071 52
29,435 '-- -- -- '- -- -1,848 7,554 9,720
445
g 343 -- ---- ----- U1
873 124 -----
51,424 210 ----- ....
VJ
5,101 10,223
----
----
---
---------
.~...
()
Y'
5,668 132 -----
9,288 ---- -- -----
1-'
~
0
00
'1-'
~
0
~
1-' 1-'
C;:l
POULTRY AND EGGS, AND BEES, HONEY, AND WAX ON FARMS AND RANGES, BY COUNTIES.
"">"J":"o".
POULTRY AND EGGS
BEES, HONEY AND WAX
COUNTIES
Number of fowls 3 months old and over, June 1, 1900.
Value of
Value of
Dozens of
I Swarms Value of Pounds !/Pounds
Q
!'!
Chickens including
all poultry, June
1, 1900
poultry Eggs pro- of Bees Bees of honey of wax
raised in duced in June 1, June 1, produced pro'cd
1899
1899
1900
1900 in 1899 in 1899
0
>.~....
Guinea Turkeys Geese Ducks
fowls
_- --1
The State _______ 4,549,1441 103,4161 208,9971 64,8951 $1,458,0551 $2,481,610 1 15,505,330 1 187,919 $242,769
---
1,650,745173,372
tt
!'!
>"tt
Appling _________ Baker___________ Baldwin_________ Banks __________ Bartow _________
Berrien _________ BBirbobo_k_s__:__ _____-_-_-_-_-_Bryan __________ Bulloch _________
Burke_____ -- ____ Butts ___________ Calhoun_________ Camden _________ CampbelL _______
31,939\ 23,634 20,702 23,474 47,415
34,412 21,363 55,426 16,197 68,613
91,529 43,390 31,291 15,370 30,803
9321 1,026
8331 283 1,018
917 574 1,381 768 2,687
3,319 430 789 607 456
6,6551 553
43129\
6181 134
998 862
961 2,103
9,213 302
2,217 966
9,073
li18 390 259
262 1,007
1,480 663
435 228
269
96
491 421
292 558
12,609\ 6,863 5,775 8,395 15,251
18,466 7,972 13,621
246,,7931961
20,072 8,227 6,648 7,132 9,359
175,,291110 \ 10,770 20,655 30,810
22,148 12,413 20,598
13,4721 35,183
36,3931 12,705 8,935 8,577 15,236
94,060\ 68,390 54,210 97,560 203,550
117,010 82,090 132,490 71,890 173,880
278,330 81,800 64,080 45,090 149,870
1,988 2,620
I ei
}3,240 1,090 :s:
122
151
536
567
1,060 3,150
z 40 !'I
210 ...;:
1,748 2,560
10,060 790
I 2,295
2,405727 853
1,032
2,693
1,996 828
1,158 1,048
20,400 490 ~
> 13,120 1,66g
3,690 8,790 5,170
21
290 790
0
i.>..:.l.
c:(')
2,348 2,471
17,290 1,690 cS:i
874 1,058
1,242 1,621
11,840 6,94'0
650 290
.i>:J !'!
655
674
7,440 280
759 1,555
- .855
1,808
6,230 670 10,700 530
CarrolL _________ C~osa _________
108,292 21,229
I
751 326
1,043 631
9421 832
28,4131 6,153
51,334 ' 421,230 12,190 103,370
3,2281 4,802 938 1,227
'28,090 1,710 8,050 160
Charlton_------- I
Chatham _______ Chattahoochee ___
Chattooga _______ Cherokee ________ Clarke ________ -ClaY-------~---Clayton ________ -
Clinch __________ Cobb ___________ Coffee ___________ Colquitt_ ________ Columbia ________
Coweta_____ ----Crawford ________ Dade ___________ Dawson _________ Decatur _________
DeKalb _________ Dodge ___ ------Dooly_________ -Dougherty~-- __ -Douglas ______ ---
Early ___________ Echols __________ Effinghamc ______ Elbert_ _________ EmanueL ___ ----
Fannin______ ---Fayette_._____ ---
7,004 11,676 13,188
38,845 50,1141 13,085 19,234 22,844
18,82;1 51,879 34,223 29,635 21,878
45,312 22,639 13,384 13,218 65,742
45,375 35,828 56,815 15,9091 25,7211
43,844 8,156 24,255
. 36,364 64,964
26,831 39,699
I 113510
366
546 265 279 894 251
602 618 780 455 1,218
999 427 125
94 2,058
488 772 2,153 1,133 202
1,019 126 846
1,669 1,601
387 360
1,441
45
278 485
149
56
1,961 828 116 665 78
2,048 1,355
34 18 261
3,624. 201
267 1,074
6,775 419
3,705 232
601
83
848 665 269 533 2,935
568 156 546
1,024 192
214 556 3,306 291 3,988 569
298 143
254 243
1,199 479
1,309
36
493 107
1,588 230
8,014 307
1,046. 1,530 414 803
3,5371 5,536 3,375
11,732 14,590 3,930 6,274 7,427
7,850 19,747 13,489
9,904 7,440
14,753 9,180 4,521 ,5,056 20,300
16,232 10,949 17,954
5,575 9,732
11,457 2,388 6,536
13,234 20,533
7;388 10,840
5,830 6,591 4,677
20,106 26,067
6,350 12,352 13,998
9,797 38,495 16,608 18,027 12,655
23,893 15,891
7,631 10,322 33,877
30,650 16,561 27,090 9,821 16,319
16,802 3,046 9,898
26,628 26,626
14,593 15,407
38,590 65,570 37,600
166,090 182,950
30,270 58,480 107,570
48,280 266,710
77,580 69,950 64,800
175,240 81,230 61,510 83,710
232,560
210,020 119,580 138,700
37,640 135,380
111,560 17,080 84,610
110,970 160,110
101,890 93,650
3259141 711
I
2,746 3,668
493 1,050 1,016
2,057 2,468 1,039
816 442
2,385 731
1,613 1,754 1,694
2,042 447
1,140 98
1,417
1,181 558
1,194 2,252
~179
2,368 1,348
401 537 913
3,927 4,108
629 1,112 1,334
2,095 3,409 1,106
933 589
2,8971 8841
2,476 2,883 1,987
2,365 679
1,696 139
2,031
1,219 550
1,278 2,916 2,895
3,663 1,735
3,470 290 5,350 130 7,770 350
I 2135,,418600
560 690
4,820 180
I 10,160 488
7,780 240
20,9721 16,950
1,717 700
10,000 7,280 3,750
650 (f;J
310 120
~
>
.~....
(fl
20,650 940 .~....
5,130 12,560
290 530
()
Y'
19,420 15,690
390 ......
870
<:o
0
00
16,440 2,980 8,790
500 ..I....
130
<:o
0
360 <:o
740
40
I 10,840 610
141,,082600
680 530
10,690 560
17,730 730
25,420 840
29,270 7,980
870 -240
............
o:,.,
POULTRY AND EGGS, AND BEES, HONEY, AND WAX ON FARMS AND RANGES, BY COUNTiES;
..........
--~--~-
---
m
I
I POULTRY AND EGGS
Number of fowls 3 months old and
BEES, HONEY AND WAX
COUNTIES
over, June 1, 1900.
Chickens including
I I Value of
Value of Dozens of Swarms Value of Pounde Pound
()
-to!
all poul- poultry Eggs pro- of Bees Bees of- honey of wax 0
try, June 1, 1900
raised in -1899
duced in 1899
June 1, June 1, produced .pro'cd
1900
1900 in 1899 in 1899
:~;
Floyd_: _____ ~--Forsyth _________ Franklin ________
Guinea Turkeys fowls
63,164
27,473 41,979
1,790 89
325
Geese Ducks
--1,958 2,440
584 1,088 1,366 1,104
.~.,
19,403 12,112 11,311
35,102 26,208 21,297
280,080 131,120 123,850
2,946 2,569 2,128
3,349 3,719 3,338
---
19,510 690
t:1
-to!
~
21,450 820 .i:.J.,j
14,320 540 1:::
Fulton __________ Gilmer __________
39,120 25,366
573
147 786
260 1,165 1,416,
11,164 9,776
21,295 19,379
122,460 151,360
1,079 3,625
1,859 5,663
12;840 52,430
300 -.zt.o.,!
870
Glascock ________ Glynn ____________ Gordon _________
8,956 5,668 47,629
168
412
46
570
122 153
875 1,305 1,797
3,323 2,361 15,569
4,442 3,040 34,471
35,740 13,710 247,720
'774 262 2,101
1,072 303
3,100
7,050 300 4,250' 130
0 ':zl
> 14,320 400
Greene __________ Gwinnett________ 1Iabersham ______ HalL ___________ Hancock ________
34,786 59,864 30,058 44,144 58,390
899 759 171 380 2,035
935 1,349
589 984
1,735
160 1,561
516 1,221
340
8,688 21,404 7,987 12,433 16,130
18,661 44,820 16,701 27,791 27,091
93,000 335,880
115,750 152,440 134,340
731 4,237 2,501 3,017
825_
I 1,o23
4,947
34,,6612861 1,141
10,270 370 :0::
'32,220 1,290 c()
22,770 23,920
880 650
c ~
10,500 670 ~
Haralson ________ Harris __________ Hart____ -- ______ Heard __________ Henry __________
29,786 43,540
25,806 30,856 43,493
323
460 735
742
465 182
546
639 602
522 1,292 417
791
566 1,044
9,388 12,733
10,173
9,099 14,325
17,685 20,244
20,096 14,438
26,253
146,240 120;300 105,440 116,380 198,660
1,388
1,997 2,156 1,629 2,228
1,945 2,020 2,797 2,097 2,459
10,490 700 15,750 710 13,320 530 17,490 570 22,450 860
Houston ________ Irwin ___________ Jackson _________ Jasper __________ Jefferson ________
Johnson _________ Jones ___________ Laurens _________ Lee _____________ Liberty _________
Lincoln _________ Lowndes ________ Lumpkin ________
--1 McDuffie ________
M c i n t o s h ______
Macon __________ M a d i s o n _________ Marion __________ Meriwether ______ Miller _________ ~-
Milton __________ Mitchell _________ Monroe _________ Montgomery _____ Morgan ______ ... __
MMuusrcrnoyge-e-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_1 Newton ___ -~-" __ Oconee__________ Oglethorpe ___ .. __
48,655 36,677 60,606 30,206 42,191
23,766 28,998 56,310 27,077 33,227
18,145 34,408 22,520 18,358
8,343
23,701
~0,999
20,390 52,912 19,057-
20,391 48,146 40,4251 28.7221 32.0.50
32,602
""'I20,307
11),147 36,687
2,140 1,187
640 608 1,150
469 976 1,176 1,233 1,011
449 971 233 661 245
426 342 226 643 449
137 1,218
7671 7891 604
471 576 648 259 1,1231
472 187
5,497 262
1,434 851
1,052
97
1,281 163
4,769
59
915 150
6,162 240
278 132
1,999 378
963
64
4,251 23..5
593 884
722 135
184 271
303
42
803 379
485
55
691 441
2,070
69
245 394
2,501 194
4,518627\
155 386
737 279
1,897 83
464 591
1,8551
I
1,1151
8{\
319 113 213
15,543 13,770 15,810 9,678 10,622
11,130 9,006 18,277 7,9471 11,651
5,996 14,831 5,138 7,267 2,553
6,928 10,243 8,430 15,004
6,092
7,588 12,358 11,566 15,274
9,071.
8,518
7,2181 12,144
6,532 10,.'>15 \
21,315 17,562 35,503 15,544 20,412
15,335 16,748 31,160 11,834 15,371
10,110 23,455
8,111 10,246
4,906
11,100 21,764 12,692 24,979
7,982
15,029
1285.,1876691 21.664 21,656
1!),3941 14,733 22,27R 13,3641 21,164
I
118,940 88,290
237,950 103,650 136,720
69,710 96,270
I 182,880 45,150 93,350
I 59,370
95,060 75,610 64,970 28,240
I 77,090 119,450 62,620 162,180 63,680
I 102,500
112,740 196,670 141.240
79;220!
I
115,620 82,\HO 142,990 52,760
102,960 I I
4721 821 2,742 945 1,189
962 586
I 1,332
1,627273
566 1.517 1;894
488 128
642 1,933
886 1,682
230
1,535 249
1,435 1.545
8991
I
2,2428931 2,026 1,1541 1,519
I
661 898 3,888 1,117 1,985
1,644003\ 2,038
3861 2,004
648 1,630 2,821
508 208
844 2,341
975 1,747
273
1,906 340
1,476 1,617 1.207
3,603197\ 2,372
I 1,256.
1,956
4,850 4,560 20,250 10,550 14,600
390 370 1,030
400 420
12,770 220 3,310 210
12,9901 560 1,470 100
12,930 1,280
4,920 12,520 21,350 4,700
1,300
6,390 12,270 10,010 12,880
1,510
10,480 1,9110
15,670 7;790 13,940
280 U...,J
830 .;,.....,
910 170 100
U.......,l.
.....
()
.Y'
130 510
1-' <0
570 590
0
..0.I.0..
110 <0
0
<0
190
50
460
140
370
24,100 I 51'i0
4,610 340
15,470 390
9,280 130
14,100
630
1-' 1-'
-<!
POULTRY AND EGGS, AND BEES, HONEY, AND WAX ON FARMS AND RANGES, BY COUNTIES.
1-' 1-'
00
-----~---
POULTRY AND EGGS
-BEES, HONEY AND WAX
-
COUNTIES
Number of fowls 3 months old and over, June 1, 1900.
Chickens including
Value of all poultry, June
1, 1900
Value of poultry raised in
1899
Dozens of Eggs produced in
1899
Swarms Value of
of Bees Bees
June 1, June 1,
1900
1900
r \
Pounds IPoun.ds of honev )of wax produced pro'cd
in 1899
1899
0
!")
0 ::0
>t>'-<l
G'uinea Turkeys Geese Ducks
t)
fowls
PPaicukledninsg______-_-_-_-_-_- I
43,8611 17,513
314 145
1-
2611 798 7771 1,699
----- ----- ----1----
15,611
27,R371 179,010
2,7()6
3,608
6,037
11,897
92,860 1,845 2,686
!")
21,120 1,300
:>'.1:.:0.1,
13,750 450 IS:
Pierce _. ________ Pike ____________ Polk ____________
17,851 i
773 4,340 J52
9,705
I 44,179 I
43,4::l0
521 R91
665 365 681 1,085
11,760 ' 13,194
12,835 22,354 22,993
67,360 144,550 185,200
1,230 1,725 1,438
1,237 2,100 2,149
9,140 1,040 11,520 610
!.z.".),
12,97(! 490
0
Pulaski - ________
33,841
1,105
2,510 117
14,918
20,330
114,360
527
820
Putnam _________
20,7901
686
824' 70
8,426
12,531
79,050
674
792
4,990 210 "i
> 6,520 I 2{0
Quitman ________ Rabun __________ Randolph _______
9,180 11,343 37,750
233 94
807
2R
8
430 816
380
46
2,526 4,252 11,171
4,284 8,231 18,770
21,650 56,610 141,850
603 2,629 1,855
574 3,663 2,008
4,210 280 0
29,460 1,520 :>:-0<
20,300
980
()
q
r...,
Richmond _______
29,142
708
161 303
9,806
15,429
84,140
562 1,042
&,690 100 q
Rockdale ________ Schley ______ ~- __ Screven _________
32,637 15,1831 63,800
187 321 2,218
201 200
216
28
3,069 158
7,239 4,304 18,449
13,056 7,387
25,973
74,970 50,630 139,190
1,096 432
1,095
1,195 572
1,269
6,160 3,770 10,070
210 ::0 230 !") 490
Spalding ________
28,633
616
401 334
7,891
12,065
74,900
961
1,331
7,180 ;280
Stewart _________ Sumter__________
Talbot __________
34,034 43,675 21,844
1,116 1,775
600
152
42
.541 141
175
261
ll,094 16.425 I
6,5421
18,005 32,744 13,247
100,410 14S,180
74,790
923 1,842
947
1,109
2,801" 9751
8,3501 420 17,510 840
9,3901- 470
Taliaferro _______ TattnalL ________
Taylor __________ Telfair __________ TerrelL _________ Thomas_<- ____ -Towns_~ ________
Troup___________ Twiggs __________ Union ___________ Upson __________ Walker__________
Walton _______ -Ware ______ ._____ Warren--------Washington _____
Walne__________ We ster_________ White_________ -Whitfield ________
Wilcox __________ Wilkes __________ Wilkinson _______ Worth __________
19,288 49,592
21,127 27,707 44,882 65,720
8,735
35.470 25,793 18.193 26,890 52,823
43,171 17,451 22,368 65,121
20,181 17,170 12,945 37,973
24,813 34,4.57 40,397 48,971
529 1,485
225 980 945 2,038
78
971 513 236 405 668
4921 708 710 1,577
530 317 182 526
854 1,274
749 1,552
695
88
7,271 346
305
52
2,520 375
551
51
3,030 265
973 608
570
'685 1,160
'561 1,646
214 106 1,217 192
1,907
1,300 2,867
1,367 4,358
608 '
300 104
225
2,275 196
. 577
1,275
186 44
884 1,805
3,5.52 335 1,331 243
2,079 299 3,864 280
4,585[ 19,669
6,358 10,179 12,774 22,415
3,704
12,358 6,775 6,784 8,126 15,817
13,968 6,645 9,102
19,952
8,998 4,529 5,078 10,187
8,993 12,238 11,617 15,678
8,698 26,448
8,942 17,008 19,141 31,498 7,504
8,942 7,943 13,960 12,922 26,983
27,599 9,806 13,683
31,534
13,548 \ 7,602 10,310 22,391
12,982 28,260 22,421 . 23,659
45,330 130,440
58,150 69,090 161,840 205,190 34,710
58,150 51,100 78,080 107,860 191,720
130,070 66,100 80,330
155,580
I 67,040
64,510 84,640 202,540
6.5,760 99,.510 127,730 13.5,330
502 2,260
758 519 1,076 1,472 1,001
I
758 265 1,891 724 3,421
1,964 1,232
644 2,347
1,672 522
1,497 1,545
186 1,119 1,549
498
545 2,332
803 1,0579681 2,0171 2,034
803 297 3,386 851 4,119
2,352 1,819
750 3,070
1,825 592
"2.,519 2,248
221 1,313 1,582
8421
4,880
90
15,990 1,220
7,130
60
4,160 280
12,630 400
20,000 210
13,773 387
7,130
60
2,060 190
25,300 370
4,700 560 (/).
22,480
830 >>-1:
>-1:
14,900 1,080 6,430 410
w H
>-1:
H
5,960
390
()
!!'
26,160 1,090
.......
15,900 5,780
17,640 15,030
2,010
980 "0 '
180 540 680
00
'.......
"0 '
"'
50
7,600 660
13,900 740
3,290 160
....
.......
"'
' l20
GEORGlA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE REPORT OF EACH PEACH CROP SINCE 1895.
1895--Good erop-900 cars. 1896--Comparatively a failure-200 cars. 1897-Comparatively a failure. 1898-Good crop-2,000 cars. 1899-Almost the ent.ire crop destroyed. 1900-Good crop. 1901-Fair crop-damaged by wet weather. 1902-Fair crop. 1903-Good crop. 1904-Large crop, fruit good. 1905--Good crop. 1906--Fairly good crop, notwithstanding damage from late frosts and wet weather Late and heavy frosts this year (1907) have wrought considerable damage to the peach crop, e~pecially in North Georgia; but near Elberton in the northern section Mr.-- Tate, who had 4,000 trees in bearing, saved the fruit on 1,000 of them by making slow fires and thus producing a smudge, whose dense smoke, wherever it reached, saved the fruit, demonstrating the fact that the saving force was the smoke and not the heat. Would it not pay all our or!)hard men to sit up with their orchards and make these smudges in sufficient numbers to {>rot~c~ all their fruit against a threatened freeze.
l'eaches Crated for Shipment.
1908-A very large erop-6,000 car loads. 1909-Prospeet for about half as large a crop as that of last year
Number and Value
OF
Domestic Animals on Farms and Ranges, june 1, 1900.
NUMBER AND 1TOTAL VALUE OF SPECIFIED DOMESTIC ANIMALS ON FARMS AND RANGES, JUNE 1, 1900,
BY COUNTIES.
'
.....
():) ~
DOMESTIC ANIMALS
NEAT QATTLE
No. of
Dairy Other
0
COUNTIES
Farms
No. of Farms 'Total Value Report-
ing
Calves Under 1 Year
Steers 1 and
Under 2 Years
Steers 2 and
Under 3 Years
Steers
3 Years and
0"1Jr
Bulls
1 Year and
Over
Heifers 1 and
Under 2 Years
Cows 2 Years
and
Over
Cows 2 Years
and,
Over
l'"J
~....
>
---- -------------
The State ______ 224,691 1 215,520 1 $33,499,683 1 211,5791 62,1281 30,1081 31,2541 24,1631 aa,5oo 1 219,4211 104,082
t:l
l'"J
Apkling ___________ Ba er_____________ Baldwin ___________ Banks ____________ Bartow ___________
1,323 994
1,356 1,726 2,134
1,286 968
1,321
1,576 1,986
309,5411 140,099 203,059 188,297
375,156
3,328 1,438 1,023 1,142
1,807
1,443 501 127
117 257
964 269 270
51 36
7411 144
53
58 44
765 61 97
185
152
1,722/ 561 435
598 742
3,103 1,800
1,447 1,820
2,491
-
6,163 621 352 270 170
>'t!
.~..;
a::
zl'"J
...;
Berrien ___________ Bibb ______________ Brooks ____________ Bryan ____________ Bullcch __________._ 1
Burke_____________ Butts _____ ~- ______ Calhoun ___________ Camden ___________
CampbelL ____ - ___
1,852 1,250 1,823
675 2,229
4,169 1,517 1,282
R7tl
1,2691
1,821 1,164 1,757
637 2,197
4,058 1,403 1,265
816 1,230
386,851 236,004 351,314' 142,896 470,963
581,535 193,670 159,020 155,107 155,550
3,700 1,012 2,500 1,624 3,839
1,619 1,224
855 2,654 1,051
2,006 179
1,021 878
1,859
310 249 172 1,485 80
989
879
62
78
583
228
491
467
862
710
175
159
60
15
84
51
781
1,380
19
26
0
787
2,246
5,191
4,733 "1
110 228
500 966
1,773 3,277
> 521
2,282 0
308
976 2,098 2.119 .~...
740
130 71 73
1,879
491 321 191
-4,971
2,100 1,535
958
41411
()
c
777
518 463
cSi
"l'"J
267
980 2,030 3,667
171
499 1.499
484
CarrolL ___________
Catoosa_________ .. __ Charlton __________
3,6995921 416
3,557 905 398
513,201 2,620
240
76
98
273 1,377 3,621
477
152,580
786
260
148
25
62
338 1,190
167
115,157 1,563
778
598
727
2!16
971
7981 4,276
Chatham __________
640
Chattahoochee _____
615
Chattooga _________ Cherokee __________ Glarke ____________
Clay ______________ Clayton __________
1,625 2,292
839 1,049
1.2"0
Clinch ____________
Cobb------------~ Coffee____________ Colquit~- _________ -\ Columbia __________
I
Cowet<t ____________ Crawford_: ________ Dade _____________
Dawson ___________ Decatur ____________
I
DeKalb ___________ Dodge ____________ Dooly _____________ D o u g h e r t y _________ Douglas ___________
642 2,684 ' 1,257 1,169 1,429
2,8.55 1,3.58
566 976 3,082
2,274 1,567
2,2251 1,020 1,290
Early _____________
Echols ____________ Effin~ham _________ Elbert ____________ EmanueL __________
1,717 267
753 2,572 2,222
Fannin ____________ Fayette ______,----[ Floyd _______ -~ ____
1,714 1,545 2,692
5620751
1,5.56 2,216
773 1,03::' 1,?37
625 2,568 1,236 1,162 1,286
2,7.56 1,259
518 931 1 2,989
2,167 1,527 2,191 1,014 1,241
1,682 264 710
2,362 2,176
1,611 1,501 2,580
141,373 .102,096
282,286 277,026 105,583 l5f\.8~n 1 161,445 I
208,902 354,037 326,16.5 240,427 173,730
393,379 168,781 89,671 104,756 512,297
333,841 284,243 409,969 155,229 141,350
240,1.59 83,582 135,630 260,775 449,7581
I 173,780
177,316 467,565
6521 695
1,348
1,703
383
742 790
' I
2,238 2,2.51
3,073 2,027
733
1,676 987 459 648
4,874
2,045 2,599 2,491
.501
856
1,528 1,121 1,226
1,349 3,465
1,278 1,062 2,223
229851
640\ 160 221 158! 311
1,313 176
1,940 1,071
126
251 236 255 183 2,191
65 1,143
795 118
36
587 587 575 235 1,701
585 189 549
41 106
479 36 8 58 23
863 56
1,157 467 58
136 214 149 66
1,240 I
101 621 424 101
14
287 417 348
61 700
467 85 350
167 66
121 92 10 28 13
936 69
1,064 301 38
58 52 1.51 62 1,767
32 341 290
44 11
250 230 352
32 682
563 38
192
100 72
143
241781 85 671
430 256 585 198 82
139 67 27 64
407
194 151 241
67 127
99 265. 165 217 455
84 102 177
3241521 1,7269721
680 874
12,,48.65941
150
671
248
900.
472 - 1,488
1,490 1,173 1,423
955 358
1,493 3,249
1,971 1,842
1,262
652 364
134 368 2,337
2,528
1,239 649
1;023 6,129
1,299 1,191
1,108 143 .512
4,118
3,250 2,807
559 1,224
368 652
5'17 624 1,423
1,945 1,322 1,774 2,297 4,840
483 .363 975
2,107 1,472 3,123
826 246
418 421 91 3GQ
144
6,649
568
7,156 4,080
362
U,_., l
>
j
566
(,_f).,
537 ()
70 !!'
173 1-'
3,896 ~
0
00
419
I
1-'
2,047 1,423
<:0 0 <:0
715
145
1,077 1,180 2,452
391
5,241
359
411
1-'
~
531 ""
......
NUMBER AND TOTAL VALUE OF SPECIFIED DOMESTIC ANIMALS ON FARMS AND RANGES, JUNE 1, 1900,
.i-.:.1.
BY COUNTIES.
!DOMESTIC ANIMALS
NEAT CATTLE
COUNTIES
II I No. of / No. of Farms Farms Total Value Reporting
Calves Under
1 Year
t Steers \ Steers / Steers
1 and 2 and Years Under Under and 2 Years / 3 Years Over
Bulls 1 Year
and
Over
Heifers
1 and Under 2 Years
Dairy Cows 2 Years and Over
Other Cows 2 Years and
Over
Q
~
1>::1
.(.j..)
>
Forsyth _____-______ Franklin __________
1,8351 2,849
21,,5798371
205,176 300,047
1,397 1,650
209941
33 77
36 68
259 254
835 1,993 818 2,610
266
441 t::l ~
>,;
Fulton ____________
Gilmer ____________
Glascock __________ Glynn _____________ Gordon ___________
1,175
1,655 624 225
1,903
1,136
1,608 614 212
1,835
214,865
187,154 76,948
64,720 312,157
915 1,246
446
1,123 1,6711
15 631
115 273 446
9 332
48
295 130
109 481
40 431 87
105 125
37 100 111
;)94 2,680
201 >
472 2,053
306
1>::1 ~
21}4
587
242 a::
394 722
634 2,296
1,481 237
~ z
~
Greene ____________ Gwinnett_ _________ Habersham ________ Hall ______________ Hancock __________
Haralson ____ -- __ -Harris _______ -- __ Hart_ _____________ Heard __________ -Henry ____________
2,111 3.442 1,461 2,489 2,215
1,517 2,592 2,089 1,681 2,471
1,958 3,303 1,349 2,367 2,183
1,412 2,548 1,977 1,522 2,356
255,714 1,324
240
116
55
98
683 2,225
480
0 l'f1
414,613 145,379
286,098 326,203
2,554
1,008 1,618 1,713
186 221
199 358
103 161 82
270
86
257
78 306
407 1,450 4,707
92
328 1,518
224
951 2,551
161
888 2,182
> 474
123
370 712
(j)
.1.>.::.1
c:(')
158,733 1,010
93
114
321,507 2,061
397
173
97 70
127 173
472 1,447 711 2,615
252 751
t""
c ~
220,720 1,394
83
231,448 1,409
210
80 87
40 153
186 74
696 1,985 527 1,744
460 320
1>::1 ~
349,032 1,659
116
91
24
135
651 2,221
470
Houston __________ Irwin _____________ Jackson ___________ Jasper------------
1,972
1,321 3,185 2.131
1,899 1,185 3,081
1,961
329,424
981
107
79
261,159 2,587 1,167
795
416,074 234,.544
2,206 968
1391 85
86 38
80
88
276 1,313
380
724
272 1,3081 2,333 3,154
95
246 1,138 3,3721
480
16
87
3491 1,6611
257
.Jefferson __________ I
I
Johnson -----~----I JLoaunreesn~ - - - - - -_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_- \ Lee_________ -~ ____ Liberty _-- __ -- -- --
Linl'oln ___________ Lowndes __________ Lumpkin ___________ McDuffie_--- __ -- __ Mcintosh__________
Macon ___ -- __ -- __ MMaadriiosno_n_____-_- ____ _-_-_--___ Meriwether ________ Miller __ ---- __ -- __ -
Milton ____________ Mit~:helL __________ Monroe ___________ Montgomery _______ Morgan ___ - __ -- __ -
Murray __ -- __ -- ___ NMeuwRctoogne_e_____-_-_-_-_-_-_-_Oconee________ -- __ Oglethorpe ________
Paulding __________ Pickens _______ -- __ Pierce ___ -- __ -- --Pike ___ ---- __ -----
2,1141
1,384 1,472 2,900 1,329 1,710
1,029 1,768 1,012 1,213
406
1,3~2
2,1\!8 1,2.62 2,939
715
1,104 1,785 2,518 1,560 1,989
1,158 1,020 2,124 1,171 2,488
2,159 1,145
861 1,940
2,0331
1,3621 1,446. 2,866 1,325 1,504
997 1,690
955 1,101
341
1,282 1,992 1,233 2,871
702
1,051 1,757 2,468 1,535 1,926
1,121 995
2,091 1,106 2,284
2,058 1,002
836 1,886
$293,~271
216,168 244,8561 505,853 211,335 257,434
133,242 298,752
95,225 145,989
68,955
220,664 225,581 193,327 432,510 132,728
131,622 329,561 362,519 369,238 256,726
198,248 142,475 253,656 161,332 324,364
231,679 113,182 236,101 295,058
1,1091
1,2381,250 2,445
590 4,085
681 2,624
583 642 1,241
740 1,240 1,1621
21,,0377351
917 3,160 1,742 3,825 1,035
1,114 666
1,261 754
1,373
1,557 791
2,255 1,322
248j
281 125 591
66 1,905
102 1,233
174 81 226
103 66 296 230 484
53 1,038
315 1,595
97
448 113
57 36 186
179 105 1,014 173
2221 !
1031 83 327 35
1,203
62 518 127
33 291
76 54 171 119 265
19 588 323 802
94
246 117
24 14 82
106 57 843 97
1241
87 44 255 61 1,167
35 342 261
41 353
107 41 32 82
265
8 238
80 944
47
84 59 25 29 101
H2 141 76S 27
991
163 50 244 63 433
116 385 117
75 76
103 148 69 169 101
126 143 150 559 87
86 74 161 66 191
237 95
615 103
4651
435 382 908 180 1,746
352 1,264
285 263 584
233 539 394
6267151
646 778 563 1,644 334
463 282 610 321 537
723 303 1,101 562
I 1,594
1;646 1,834 3,957
.720 3,181
5~5
538 911 2,841 416 6,238
1,066 3,159
976 1,066
412
1,033 1,998 1,503 2,886 1,556
1,312 3,900 2,326 3,658 1,677
1,600 1,409 1,853 1,236 2,25(1
308
2,891
103
250
1,883 Ul
219 ~.8..
... 424
(fl
348 8
595 776
-()
(fl
f-'
"' 132 0
1,795
00
I
965 f-'
"' 4,698 0
253 "'
371 369
303 106 747_
2,107 1,161 2,167
1,893
348
87
""' 4,238
i 649
!>:)
Cit
I, NUMBER AND TOTAL VALUE OF SPECIFIED DOMESTIC ANIMALS ON FARMS AND RANGES, JUNE 1900,
f-.'
BY COUNTIES.
&c-.
---~-
---
DOMESTIC ANIMALS
NEAT CATTLE
COUNTIES
I No. of
I Farms No. of
Farms Report-
IICalves
Total Value Under Year
Steers 1 and
Under
Steers Steers
2 and 3 Years
Under
and
I
Bulls Heifers 1 Year 1 and
and Under
Dairy Cows 2 Years and
Other Cows 2 Years
and
()
lo'-i
~
.0>...
ing
.
I 2 Years 3 Years
Over I Over 2 Years
Over
'Over
t::l
l'i
>tj
Polk ______ --------~ 1,775 1,645
I
242,970 1,151
105
36
56
1
125
I
533
1,5591
>
187
!>:!
:>s-: i
Pulaski ___________ Putnam ___________
1,984 1,546
1,877 1,473
352,599 1,578
493
361
233,827 1,217
220
102
226
158
663
2,020
z 1,135 J:%j
15
121
556 1,991
442_ >-i
Quitman __________
613
594
91,705
429
86
46
40
Rabun ____________
1,067
1,010
120,991
710
436
325
337
Randolph _________ 1 2,219
2,150
298,921
935
101
41
40
18 85
58
569
446 1,392
251 292
0
~
82
335 1,438
303 >
Richmond _________ R 0 c k d a l e __________ Schley ____________ Screyen ___________
Spalding __________
1,053 1,082
802
2,275 1,272
979 1,036
793 2,203 1,180
168,797 ll4,039 98,385
379,090 194,034
412 578 4161 2,894
9121
24 61 62 1,316 73
27 22 51 364 69
39
7 26 209 20
68 59
186 280
986 890
226 105
0
.!>..:.!
(')
66 347
73
194 1,189
484
587 3,712 1,484
172 c::
2,304 195
l'
c>:-: i
!>:!
l'i
Stewart_ __________
1,751
1,700
277,105 1,366
225
146
65
89
450
1,730
398
Sumte._ ___________
2,332
2,246
387,723 1.155
130
70
83
140
410 1,770
427
Talbot_ ___________
Taliaferro . ________ I TattnalL ________ --1
1,398 1,129 2,086
1 381 1,086 1.992
198,414 131,239 446,633
1,453-783
3,571
203 60
1,677
l168
1,00213
80 897291
11-7
563 1,767
6ll
55
218 1,097
"291
873 1,9'79 4,220 8,067
I
I I
Taylor ____________ Telfair ____________ Terrell ____________ Thomas ___________
Towns _____ ,_______
1,045 831
2,189
3,183 665
1,025 819
2,150
3,110 657
158,816
964
284
171
91
80
355 1,174
670
209,557 1;821
960
591
735
216
877 2,008 2,120
284,042
858
85
60
33
86
266 1,300
427
464,382 4,195 1,335
882
713
339 1,814 5,143 3,109
80,842
487
271
190
175
35
302
927
126
TTwroiugpg-s_-_-_-_-__-_-_-_-_-_-_Union _____________
2,324 1,166 1,444
2,2421 1,141
1,409
341,923 144,550 157,359
1,652 694
1,011
195 67
442
104 75
437
52 45 410
147 68 71
814 2,346
181
739
463 1,861
429 429 269
Upson_- ______ ----
1,472
1,404
207,450 1,101
178
101
47
117
254 1,365
629
Walker____________
2,038
1,941
354,681 1,867' 1,558
H6
364
66
969 2,506
458
WWaarlet_o_n_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_- , Warren ___________
Washington ____ --- I
Wayne____________ , Webster___________
White_____ -------- I
Whitfield __________
Wilcox ____________ Wilkes ____________ Wjlkinson _________ Worth ____________
2,737 667
1,377 3,419
934 1,005 1,008 1,526
897 2,321 1,642 1,961
2,672 638
1,369 3,344
908 977 96? 1,404
890 2,251 1,605 1,907
327,897 1,679
155
113
73
188
673 2,549
299 U..;l
177,925 189,775 469,060
2,231 927
1,930
776 189 380
623 121 190
622 142 180
367 89
262
962 310
1,466 1,297
4,442 406
..>....;.
731 2,653
912
(...f...);.
()
233,321 3,120 1,485
826
933
513
1,435
1,852
6,193 ~(f)
132,452
556
24
45
38
117,130
712
232
152
178
27 77
149
726
344 1,172
156"
153
f-l <.0
250,035
189,210 342,779
1,393
2,202 1,613
455
1,062 158
297
521 140
82
350 107
105
I
2114451
698 1,994
282
0
'f
940
2,553
1,774
f-l <.0
590 2,257
590
0 <.0
224,086 1,046
2231
130
370,180 3,272 1,135
782
62 380
131
301
3781 1,567
1,333 4,361
939 2,394
....
b:l ""l
NUMBER AND TOTAL VALUE OF Sl'ECIFIED DOMESTIC ANIMALS ON FARMS AND RANGES, JUNE 1, 1900,
......
~
BY COUNTIES.
00
COUNTIES
I HORSES.
1
MULES
I
:
I ....
...
"1":::1'
1
I
l
..;
o.::g".,'
lo.
c:e I = I :e = .E "~;1::::l:::a1>~
I "' ~::=; <ll
j .....
~
...
I ,.::g., I o2"a':>::
I. o
I
.
"1:::1
~ ~..;
II .......
6 I
;::l
I I I""1:::'1 1"1~:':::1a=>
I
..;
1
<ll
.....
~
> Q ) Q )
o.
'~CQ)!
...
c"':::
C'l
o lo
-I
"1:::1
l.. ~ui
"'
~"'..: .,>.o,
C'l
"1:::1 "' "'
:Q..~,)..~.
<
SHEEP
I
I , ~
I ... I gJ
="1:::1
~
"1:::1 I
-~5~=
I I
:;, I ]~.I ..... ~
/ =. . = ..,.,c I ., ....,c..~; I ..,"1:::1
E.., "'
r~"' ....:<
tD
... 1
I 1 -"'">'
l r::r: I
.,; ~
<ll
-;
.,~
=~
rF.l
I
~ II
Q)
= ~,I s.:::
.:::
--"' "'
..w.,~
<ll
I 0
0
I I I
- E:- 0 "1:::1 o-; -~C~J~e1""~>"1 ~m-=Es
=..!t..d bll
g;.
<ll:;;, 00
_
0
.! tr:l
=o.':::
. , -~~.r,l'EJ
;::!~ ......
-;E!Z~
0
!'!
.~...
>
>
ti
!'!
The State __ ---- I 02814,5251118,854 II,489I5,02II20o,8111519I77,384II62,704I96,I9o 1 1,424,298184,6241 SI,689,6I51 15,892,046 >"d
1:<:1
8
Appling _______ --~ 271 331 1,0651 1
7
R07 51 1,354 3,275 1,670 20,463 3,706
12,7281 62,543 is::
Baker__________ _ 191 25 579
4 10
789 _- 184
Baldwin________ _ 26 16
658. li 16 1,417 1
28
Banks ______ - __ 24 19
688
2 15 1,346 1 153
Bartow ________ _ 51 48 1,3211 26 78 2,348 3 189
385 131
26
1
304 105
332 138
7,494 5,700 4,246
7,139
1.123 221 20
113
2,406 6,017
26,14G 25,092
z!'!
8
I 11,327
26,510
24,872 44,783
0
~
Berrien ________ _ Bibb___________ _ Brooks__________ . Bryan _________ _
1
Bulloch_-- __ ---- 1
Burke_____ .. ___ _ Butts ___________ !Jalhoun________ _ Camden ________ _ CAmpbelL ______ _
Carroll. ____ ... __ _ Catoosa ________ _
27 12 20 26 17 20
8 11 25 43
13 59 24 38
8 14 181 24
I3 18
30 46 46 40 I
1,1651 3 . 9
595
1 28
1,155
1
5
483 -----1-----
1,790
4 22
1,402. 3 99
622
3 22
4oo
s 23
578 _____ 10
698
2 16
1,744
84~
10 I 81
261 44
1,606 1 1,541 -- 1,770 1
383 --1,898 1
1 4,005 1 },519 1 } 1,244 1 2
117 ___ 1,029 1---
3,328 99 187
538 2,164
71 42 13 299 24
3,1511 3 214 776 5 448
8,061' 122 I 461
1,2061 4,376 I
4,364 17
313
508 3,341
226 204
51}
19
45
11
1,477 635
33
11
439 270 896 I 200
29,196 5,974
29,S85
7,575 36,854
2,151 183
1,284
890 3,991
25,3531 717
4,343 111
10,120 353 6,232 474
3,044
7
8,822 163 4,6751 188
13,292 6,511 12,279 9,609 13,750
11,7581 11,122
3,366 2,923 12,367
15,593 14,6931
95,115 30,883
114,463
~
1:.<.:.1. ()
17,327 ~
95,044 ~
~
64,569 ~
35,402
39,484
8,143
28,229
77,199 20,670
Charlton ___ ----- \ Chatham . ______ -~ Chattahoorbee .. __
Chattooga _____ --~ Cherokee_ _______ CCllaayr_k_e__--_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-, Clayton _________
Clinch __________ Cobb ___________ Coffee.... ________ .. Colomtt.. ____ ---Cp'umbia . ______
--1 Coweta__________ j
Crawford ______
--1 Dade-----------
Dawson _______ Decatur _________
J! 81
I~ I 13
I
371
40 14
1L 4
81 61
19 14
21
6
32 47
7 16
13 25
19 18
I I I
2g 3110
37!
52221 178
211301
DEKalb ________ ..
Dod~!' _____ ----Dooly ___________ Dou~herty _______ Douglas _______ ....
351 109\ 8 11
20 23
3
2
5 15
Earlv _______ ---- Hl 29
Echols_'_______ -- -- ---
4
Effinjl'ham ______ -
9 11
E!hert .. ______ --- 37! 33
FmanueL _______ , ' 40 38
I Fanmn_-_ -------- 74 61
Fayett~'---- -----1 9 13
1; I 347j----- I
491
2j
2591 2,
111 1,1021 631 99
1,173 17 36
494
2
6
401 14 50
577
2 25
404
4
3
1,826
2 67
673074\,
1 _____
8 5
6451 5 14
1,077
9 75
495
3 19
453
9 30
370 12 51
3,0481 30' 61
1,500 181 90\
Rll' 61 121
1,135
2 20
373
3
6
601
4 19
891
2 11
177 -- --- -- ---
503 -- --- 10
1,186
6 40,
1,464 10 611
7951 682
----7-41\
85! 7\
5~~ 1""2
788,- 3
6441 1,317 I 579
149 70
307981
368 7
1,523 11 759 1,106 330
1,897 7 393
938 191
i767 ---
24
60
7
1,176 1,179
2 ------ ------- ------
1
8
9
4
I 498 2
1,857. 2 1,3~9 I 3
795 1
1,228 ---
796 2,233 1,206
56
138
41
4,149 10,427 9,037
4,557,1(530 10,156
167
343
27
3,086 1 1,456 2
23431
59 28
20 22
433 6 232
512 525-
728 7 321 I 4861 171
1,330 10 3,1751 6,756! 3,6821
I
1,457 5
50 I
92\ 32
I 1.583 2\
21,,9535731 ___1 II
7551 921."6>
] 806 1,390
40
1,131\ I 1,174
40
973 1 1 45
120
47
i 1,4051 1 266 ---
!
401 2,522 3,098
86
304
85
533 --- 510
858 439
2,126 51 108
303 124
2,213 7 3,063 5,665 4,957
1,92~ 782 13
1,454 ---
1
3,204 - 30
8541 14
6,7091 590
2,576
90
4,978 369
9,091 596
7,107
20
1,940 146
7,650
96
2,306
6
13,080 6,378
21,297 19,536
5,339
7,977 7,174 4,769. 4,759 iH,133
5,512 16,511
19,6591 5,146 2,830
1,128 53
1,547
6961 669
I
335 365 383
18 5,576.
3~ I
729 1,025
53 42
16,121 6,045
11,238. 1>,917 32,932
1,517 200
1,278 189
2,366
11,592 3,928
155 102.
3,7721 5,428 7,533
17,772 9,!}53
19,4'.27
20,801 13,504
5,910 4,816, 6,696,
4R,600 49,954 13,031 27,262 21,757
6,507
36,562
20,575 2,887
49,399
61,022 U...J,
2,644
56,639 >-
R,71 7
17,570 :::.:
(..f.j,
12,7791 46,392 ;:;
10,389
37,440 Y'
14,7291 10,441
17,846 25,178
.....
w
31,332
113,056 0
00
18,111
4:?,059
..I.... w
I 11,011
14,936
51,225 105,484
w 0
2,1!98
9,955
8,59o 1 26,806
6,024 2,774 2,020 38,4P3 11,467
29,111 7,410
49.676 20,193 21,118 11,913 93,982
37,433 ......
33,595
<:{) :J:l
NUMBER AND TOTAL VALUE OF SPECIFIED DOMESTIC ANIMALS ON FARMS AND RANGES, JUNE 1, 1900,
!-' C>J
BY COUNTIES.
0
HORSES
MULES
SHEEP
"....'.. o"' "' I "..'. "' . 1lIIl'H. ".s.'. "...' Is~].. COUNTILS
<l>
;::::1:1...: !5~
0~ 0
I Flovd_________ --~ 74
For~<vth _________
26
FrPnklin ________ . 42
~I Fuiton _________
9
GI!m<:.r __________ 31
10~1 Glascock ________
Glynn ___________
4
2.~
5gl -i3j Gordon _________ 80
I
:~::1 ~
":O::1'il~<l>~ I
,..c<~
."..',<l.>..
0 I
75 52 28
39 25
6
161 73
:::1 ol
"~' ~
<~l>0> C'l
I ... <l>
I I
;::::1:1...:
I
i
..r.,n<l~>
0~
I
i 0
I
:::1 ::;~
":::1'!~<~l>
,..c<~
ooli)
~"'
0
1,659 843
1,133
836 712 230 237 1,553
4~1
no I :'16'
521
1
39'
77,
2'
2
82
.::
~
"..'. ...
~ <U <l> > ~0 C'l
.;.:.l<l">'
g 1
2,6201 34/ 1,4231 3 2,273 2
779 3 869 11
606 3 83
1,562
...
<l>
:::::1; oo..:
.D~
Oil<l>~
H
:::1
.~..
<l>~
i!: ...
~
Oil
<;l.> ,
'-:.::l<::l>
...; ;I ~ _. ~
rn <l>
<i!l>:
> 0
l"'"'<l>> l~<l>O
lil :iil
--------
7841 1,190
851 223
194
426
3431 97 141
8 2,407
54 317 378
202 3,471
71 804 901
1 870
16 369
1451
Greene __________ 67 89 1,347 261 61 1,5::.1 1 211
238
65
Gwinnett_ _______ 20 55 1,778 12 50 2,915 3 340
650 208
Habersham ______ HalL ___________
46 33
33 21
747 19 26
725 7 743 1,425 282
989 19 40 2,086 5 248
554 155
Hancock ________ 87 100 1,356 13 64 2,008 --- 158
229
97
Haralson ________ 21 32
682
4
9 1,020 2 163
215 226
J'Iarris __________ Hart____________ Heard __________
26
12 42
39 18
17
908
9 40 2,472 1
21
27
8
I 779 -- ---
601
8
12 1,849 --58 1,635 1
310890
322 456
1163671
Henry __________ 33 43 1,040
2 47 2,594 2
29
79
11
00
~
~
~ Q) :::1 -~
w.
12,606 4,511 5,840
00
~
~
<l>
_ ~
. ....
0.8...~...
.
00
~
..,.;.;
~
0
c!l
s "='"-"o~
.<~~lC>~t"'.Jg~J ~a
p:;
7181 76 44
29,898 11,571 15,873
3,046
66
13,4011 91
5,1211 131
81,,5855401
339 163
16,161 31,135
3,941
8,141 25,436
6,646' 10,314
5,512 6,647 11,262
1,064 191 89 11 463
15,411 31,388 11,095 18,890 13,033
3,925
75
8,922 178
4,164
12
6,077 . 194
7,228 119
10..010 15,400
12,849 6,892 15,602
..!.-fnI 0~>
...== ~::;
bra~ o .....
s <l>~al
0
J-<1
@
> 0
::; Oil ......
~s~~ ti
::>
J-<1
98.436
>"tt
i>j
42;907 46.715
>-i ~
z1"1
23,834 >-i
51,289 22,318
0o-n
> 3,960
53,533 0
.:.:.0..
41,332 82,194 24,625 43,542
(cJ: c~ :
::0
47,047 1"1
28,304 48,242
36,696 46,021 50,877
Houston ________ Irwin ___________ Jackson _____ : ___ Jasper- ______ --_ Jefferson ________
Johnson _________ JLLoeaneue_rse__n___s_____________-_-_Liberty _____ -- __
LLoiwncnodelns _--_-_-_-_-_-_-_Lumpkin ________ McDuffie ________ Mcintosh________
Macon __________ Madison _________ Marion __________ Meriwether ______ Miller __________ -
Milton __________ MitchelL ________
24 25
936
10 10
844
58 68 1,790
30 33
834
19 50
959
9 27 3 27 9 102 3 32 2 59
2,846 3 1,024 3
2,785 10 2,089 1
1,947 17
60 3,168
198 10
78
138
6,295 522 48 259
23 3,672
129 24
149
10 10
603 -- ---
9 1,511 --- 946 2,777 1,861
59 44
568
8 66 1,839 4 100
241
65
16 24 1,407
7 72 3,086 3 1,342 2,348 2,173
9
7
558
2 30 1,667 3
4
4
5
60 63 1,089
5
8
335 18 1,802 4,551 .2,176
19 24
606 -- ---
3
888 1 474
644
72
24 16 1,001
2 16 1,493 1 333
733 6'<7
39 30
379 16 43
494 4 614 1,0ll 375
18 35 19 23
637
1 14 1,041 --- 606
230
54
248 -----
4
36 --- 862 1,923 472
14 27
608
46 48 1,070
38 29
610
38 46
958
43 39
591
4 28 1,682 4------
4 ------
8 37 1,625 3 183
455
99
2
9 1,474 ---
3
23
5
8 56 3,321 4 107
183
25
3
8
606 --- 1,309 2,605 2,285
13 12
536
56 58 1,363
2 29
894 2
72
130
33
7 35 1,451 --- 1,2881 2,252 1,043
14,338 490
20,099 -----7,550 160 6,307 427
16,564 1,048
6,787 9,999 21,864 7,330 $ 10,535
61,404 48,981
57,057 42,517 $ 63,367
14,420
8,472 27,678
8,210 14,903
355 1,137 1,469
' 93 1,123
3,978 21,202
5,666
5,312 1,552
491 2,170
40 471
53
10,991
5,135 10,223 10,806
10,258
271 92
343 381 1,857
2,973
9
22,715 914
10,606 12,189 12,975
3,199 17,569
7,290 10,242 9,342
8,389 3,017
6,950 13,797 8,492 15,975 7,375
9,915 8,504
61,111
39,820
114,344
26,409
25,981 (f).
20,037 >>-i
75,471
>-i
H
20,526
'JJ
8
22,248
H
n
3,876 .oo
40,317
>-'
~
41,610 0
39,181
00 I
79,442
>-' <Q
51,045 0 ~
23,483 76,962
I-".
NUMBER AND TOTAL VALUE OF SPECIFIED DOMESTIC ANIMALS ON FARMS AND RANGES, JUNE 1, 1900,
<:;:)
BY COUNTIES.
():)
I
'
HORSES
MULES
SHEEP
COUNTIES
,....,
a>
"slj...~:
0.J Q;;).,
0
~::l~,
"C gl
;..
,....,C'-1
s 02 "lj
0
"0
r:: Qo~~;)j..Q>;)
;;., 0 C'l
,....,
@ -e
...:
0 2
Qj
Q;;).,
0
I ~::l~ I
"C gl
"~0
"' 0,~....,c-'-(e~1l)
~..; ~ ~ d Q)
...., 0
u
!C'l
~ a;i ~
-..g;a:;l:G:~:>:II
al "g
;:l
lo;Jo;J oo...:
"'I r.n s iQll)
~...
..D. d~
ol ....,
< ....:l
... gl
~
"' > ,....,o
~ ""~0
:,: ol
~
.zI 'e
~...
"C gJ
.:: "'
.o,...._:
s ~ I 00
><),;)
o;j Q) 0
~
~uj.
.o -~
;::Q)
~
00
~
!:lC
.o Ol
~00
0
0
~ Q)
.!.I~ ~~
."S~ljc..:r: l.>.;.O. ~S
r:: .:: ..O.. o-wo;01~-
'"~""0' 0o:->~'CdD..~...
Q) ...... 00 ..0
~
I z; OQ ~l
)~"-'..-.,
r;;:;
....
>
0 ~
~
0
> H
t;l
!T1
Monroe _________ j 24 --------------~~
89 1,005
2 41 '2,737 1
77
105( 17
Montgomery_____ 11 20 1,055 14 14 1,343 2 2,602 4,411 2,290
8,958 2951 21,279 1,820
20,7'55 10,123
'tl
51,996 82,970
.>~..,
Morgan_________ 29 29
838
5 21 2,191 ___
25
71
5
Murray __ __ __ __ _ 88 64 1,086 68 90
980 15 690 1,023 433
6,206 679 8,839 308
12,706 17,015
39,795 ~
34,682 !.zT..,!
Muscogee__ __ __ __ 16 Newton_________ 20 Oconee__________ 20 Oglethorpe______ 80
Paulding ________ , 21 Pickens_________ 27 Pierce___________ 10 Pike____________ 30 Polk____________ 39
21
347
3 49
767 __ _
34
89
7
23
736 _____ 46 2,169 4
21
66
17
28
709
2 14 1,079 1
91
194
34
69 1,582
5 27 2,279 1 192
314
91
29
957 10 142 1,357 6
50
191 151
21
474 29 27
766 3 331
620 167
32
845
9 21
451 2 1,098 2, 717 1,588
33
778
4 47 2,215 1
18
30
2
30
931 30 37 1,422 10
72
128
63
3,442 5,157 3,456 8,658
5, 726 5,679 14,237 6,406 4,979
63 126 574 935
33 75 2,675 215 300
5,528 15,530
5,281 17,443
19,391 9,086 6,542 12,225 11,601
21,319
39,524
0 "'1
26,821
56,352 >-
0
36,443 ;~::
26,961 r:: 41,309 r...,
46,735 r::
33,119
~
!T1
Pulaski __ __ __ __ _ 32 26 1,115
5 26 2,213 __ _ 125 1,153 144
Putnam_________ 35 44
667 15 28 1,851 __ _ 248
366
31
Quitman________
8 12
218
1
9
746 2 ______
90
3
Rabun__________ 27 24 Randolph_______ 13 29
434 869
28 8
77 33
5851 2,2o7
8 4
--1-,-6-92j---2-,-2-8-6
___9__7_0
19,251 6,044 3,101 8,911
14,498
1,146 590 9 747 46
9,444 11,923
1,611 20,655
5,696
69,593 29,891
8,623 28,660 45,623
Richmond _______ 15
Rockdale. _______ 15
Schley __________ 19
Screven _________
8
Spalding ________ 33
Stewart- ________ 23 Sumter__________ 13 Talbot __________ 22 Taliaferro _______ 58 TattnalL ________ 62
Taylor __________
8
Telfair __________
5
TerrelL _________
8
Thomas. ________ Towns __________
41 38
T r o u p ___________
Twiggs. _________ U n i o n ___________ Upson __________ Walker__________
34. 30 43 11 134
Walton _________ Ware ___________
22 14
Warren _________ 40
Washington _____ 53
Wayne__________ Webster_________ White___________ Whitfield _______
26 9 55 90
18
855
3 36
11
504
4
8
7
371
1 10
14 1,043 -----
50
40
503
7 55
43
655
25 1,094
32
575
23 1,030
36 1,335
8 46 4 19 6 69 2 12
2 16
20
427
4 23
I19
588 -- ---
649
7
4290 2,330
3
9 44 82
28
440 23 50
77
899 18 43
11
439 -- --- 24
42
724 70 114
15
540
7 25
93 1,929 86 138
28 52
1,5323501
20 2
61 15
35
878 10 23
40 1,750
6 74
29
842
7 11
9
505
2 17
31
515 48 36
74 1,315 87 72
887 13
8
889 ---
4
740 --- ------
2,284 --- 956
1,487 7
28
24
16
21
7
8 ------
2,911 900
42
4
1,980 1
2,779 ---
1,528 1
607 --1,860 ---
1,184 25 652 1
2,465 --1,908 ---
330 6
4 10 14 34 1,985
118 1,971
790 1,273
5 22
122
118 5,243
56 10 43
5 3,849
260 3,560
2 2,071 1,748
40 2,443
13 1,534
843
2,461 1,257
743 1,637 1,461
3
19
79
19
1------ ------- -----14 1,913 2,880 1,073
11
2
461 13
36 1,688 2,263 429
2,597 381
1,248 3,491
8
63
1 1,005
4
87
7 115
226 2,192
316 301
69 1,139
60 82
348 978 551
1,131
1 1,154
1 -----6 521 24 949
2,679
902 1,557
1,928
255 403
4,667 211
2,973
12
4,964
37
25,319 813
3,701 127
10,369 15,389
6,238 3,440 27,321
79 123 280 325 2,993
8,725 11,156 16,083 36,236
5,865
888 1,008
225'
1,854 16
7,522 365 8,320 377
11,559 -----5,933' 184
13,185 788
7,681 11,650 8,639 25,758
272 1,619
894 343
14,097 6,477 4,548 6,882
2,459 23
43 254
6,035 6,220 4,726 14,605 8,452
13,157 12,002 10,319 5,096 13,282
7,810 14,916
4,682 15,525 25,941
14,065 3,255
25,736 11,699 52,391
12,088 8,954
12,818 13,553
29,187 3,862 15,120
33,235
11,564 24,654 26,431 65,727 25,943
47,467 68,272 33,388 15,418 63,488
(/)
41,785 56,121 1, 6916 40,213
> ~
~
eH n
::!
20,664 n
-"'
44,594
35,074 ~ '"""
37,953
0 00
37,227 I
63,847 ~ '"""
0
~
63,535
24,320
37,715
119,462
10,034 24,546 24,017 39,996
'w"""
CN
NUMBER AND TOTCL VALUE OF SPECIFIED DOMESTIC ANIMALS ON FARMS AND RANGES, JUNE 1, 1900,
f-0
~
~
BY COUNNIIES.
-----
--------
HORSES
MULES
SHEEP
COUNTIES
. I
~
1'""'1
I ~ 00
~.. I "~' g~:,
..; ... C'l
2~ 2t
0 ?~ 0 "'0
Q
Q
Wilcox __________ Wilkes __________
16 56
4 73
Wilkinson _______ 17 19
Worth __________ 23 14
~;;
"' . ... ... =<1) <;1..)
;;;... 0
N
......
i' 55
"0
..;
00 ol ;J <1)
0 :>..
Q
~
;:I
"~0
Z::
<1)
ol :>..
,....,C'l
00 ... ;J <1)
c;"'
Q
6~ I
665 -- ---
1,310
2
(
630
3 19 I
9761 1 241
"0
~
...00 ... ol <1)
<1) ;..
:>,0
N
,_I . rn' 1'""'1
-o::! -g ..;c:l
<ll:
Olll
...
<1)
~- ;:I
'" =I 8 ~ ~l ~ ~ 00 ...:
1 rn ,_.,
:>.,
:< I j
752 4
2,368 1 1,693 --11828 1
843
188 25
1,781
"0
~
~
<,.1.).,
...... ...;
rll <1) <1) ;..
~ 0
r1
.;.6J"~'
<l)ol
~=
"~0 3:>5.. ''
<ll,...., I
rll
...
""' <1)'
ol 0 ' 'I
I " ' <..1.) ;..
I~ i
1,733
329 64
3,884
1,481 145 47
4,190
00
<1)
"'<1)
01)
ol
-a
c.)
~
~
01)
ol
-a
=;"J'
0
. ~ s.~
~ o - oo
'"OJ::~~
g; s .2:<1)
0
<1)
~
<lloo"";i ~
~1'""'1 00 d
00
0
~
12,698 8,298 14,401
23,054
609 1,529
297 1,480
6,117 15,190 9,030 14,269
0
ci
a ..cI I 01)
'".;!:l
0::
~"0.-'0<
o
2
~ > H
0 00'"0 ~
~S$~ ..;!;
Q) o:s
Q,) F-.!
:~-;
>
ti
j':j
s'"d
is:
47,627
zj':j
50,675 >-i
57.246 0 34,193 "'!
>-
0 ::0
H n c
~
::0 ~
DETAILS, BY STATES, OF FARM VALUE OF IMPORTANT PRODUCTS ON DATES INDICATED.
[Cotton, butter, and chickens expressed in cents per pound, eggs in cents per dozen, hay in dollars per ton, other products m cents per bushel.)
Wheat.
Corn.
Oats.
Potatoes.
Hay (loose).
State or Territory.
.....
,...;
,...;
~<!I :~;:
00
~
,...;
. I ci
g I~
~ I .,...;~ .....
oo)ci
~~~
_.. ~
ci
~......
..d
...
-.~..
"..d
...
.. I ;.
~
<0. <0. ::";;: ! < 'I < :;";:
.
~ ......
.
......
g
~
.....
..........
~ 1:: <0. <0.
i :;~::
g00
.....
,...;
].
<
,;
0
~
ci
~
,...; ,...;
..d
c [' t:
<0. I :;";:
~
~ ,...;
:a
<0.
~0~1-1 ~~1--~~I Me ........ _
N.H ------Vt --------Mass
---
~0~
__
1
~~-
~~~~
R. L--------
~~I
~f
95
+~
~~
94.
773816665, 74 64'
75 64 75 65
62
61 60 60 64
63
61 61 65 65
73
80 77 99 99
68 81 76
89 94
7114.2.5114.00 12.50 8016.0017.0016.00 6514.0014.0012.50
9517.7017.5018.50 9918.4018.0018.50
Conn _______ ,_____ ,_____ ,___ _
N.Y NPa. J __-_-.-_-_-__--.-.
Del ________ _
11116211011711 9977 114 llO 97 117 112 96
81 78 76 74'
71'
87241 72 74 67
774416620 72 59 71 59 62 59
61
.'i8 56 57 53
62
61 59 58 58
97
83 95 88 83
92
77 91 81 80
9016.3016.5018.50
7111.7512.2514.50 7814.7514.5016.7.') 7011.7512.0015.00 6812.7512.5016.25
Md ______ .. _
WVa. V-a--_-__-_-_-_--_ N.C ......
s. c --------
116 113 113 124 129,
9~ 111301 9
110 101 117 106 128 120
7081
86 89 94
7 05 1
821 86 90
76301
78 83 86
65961
65 72 76
'58 87 80 7111. 7512.2515.00
6506 60 89 81 7912.6012.5015.00
62 69 75
65 97 90 8812.00 11 . .'iO 14. 2.1 68 103 95 9914.0014.0015.00 76 129 125 12516.101.5.7515 ..')(}
Ga --- ----Fla.... Ohio . ____ .. Ind .. Ill ----
Mich ______ _ 'MViinsn ----_-__-_--_ MIoow.a. ______ __
N. Dak ____ _ S. Dak ____ __ Nebr ______ . Kans ______ _ Ky
129
119 116 111
1281 11Ol 921 88
89 85 114 94 70 66 113 91 65 63 107 92 62 61
~~I 7571 8704
621 55 53 561 53 51 1>7, 52 51
70 121 123 12016.5015.5018.00 72 126 139 12515.50 16 .00 17.50 53 92 85 76 9.25 9.0010 . .50 49 100 90 75 9.30 9.2511.00 49 106 94 83 8.80 8.7511.00
118
55 53 53
100 110101 9231 6730 662716641 51 50 50
105 103 95 61 58 58 48 47 46
100 95 85 57 55 54 48 45 46
110 106 90 66 62 56 55 51 49
67 53 9.30 9.0011.75 71 59 8.00 8. 2510.25 65 50 5.25 5.50 5.25 69 65 7.00 6.50 7.00 86 83 8 .20 7 . 25 8. 25
103 98
1100001 9902
652516524
67 57
47 45
45 44
45 45
95 94 83 54 53 53 45' 43 44
102 99 86 61 57 54. 5.5 51 50
120 110 95 74 69 64 63 60 60
63 67 5.50 5.40 4.75 63 60 5.20 4.75 4.00' 64 70 5.40 5.00 .'i.OO' 93 98 6.30 6.25 7.00 95 8811.6011.7513.25
Tenn
Ala---------
M
I~a
i
s_s_-_-_-_-_-_-_-
-_
Tex ______ __
Okla ______ __ Ark ______ __ Mont ______ _ Wyo __ -- __ __
Colo..... __ --
N. Mex ____ _ UArtaizh-- -_-_-_-__._.._ Nev ______ __
11~ 117
111
10
190801
79411
87091
68821
67411
67221
67331,
101 130
90, 128
9712.80 12.25114.00 12213.6013. 2515.00
110 100 92 83 81 71 69 70 126 1401 120 12.2012.0013.00
107
1041 98
82 72
80 68
73 67
68 63
72 60
671 110 1251 110 11.40 10'. 00 11.25 56 127 140. 111 9.20 8.7511.00..
104 105
99 94
114.
95 101 95
99, 99
89761 6748 755815713
~t-~6
110 75
62 73
75 82 74 73
56 64'
60 58 68
58' 651
g~l
601
112 5.60 5.50 7.25 6523111227111310 10510.7510.0011.00 45 104 81 50 8.60 8.25 8.00 48 74 73 76 8.0010.00 7.75 51 89 78 6512.2511.25 8. 50
111-
ly~ 1~g,__ :~-- :~-- :~ 134,
109. 1351
1113501 191121 191091 180581. 7938
87521 62 82
77081 54 75
67181-1-1-7-1 --9--81-1-0-2-11131..850011140. 0.5001119..5750 52 62 60 64 9.30 8.00 7.25 73 90 80 10010.60 9.0011.50
0 1 WIdaashho_-_-____.._._.
19016
190021
6756
88881
99631
6780
6672
5595
44051
9724
71~
83
~4541183..0500127..2755117..05((}}
Oreg _______ . Cal---------
.1.02..104.277:8_7 ~9~4 ~80~~60~5~8 ~4~3 ~9b~~93
47671~1~11.460.151.0010 09..9705
u. s ------ 107.0103.9189.867.564.7\61.2 b3. 2 51.150.0 186.3 80.070.419.65 9. 4710.83
DETAILS, BY STATES, OF FARM VALUE bF IMPORTANT PRODUCTS ON DATES INDICATED.
[Cetton, butter, and chickens expressed in cents per pound, eggs in cents per dozen hay in
,dollars per ton, other products in cents per bushel.]
Barley. !I
Rye.
Cotton.
Flaxseed. Butter. Eggs. Chick-
1-----,.-
----
~ ens.
T~~~f:O~; I ~co
:
~ I~
: :
~~.
~
:
~
:
-~~.
~ ~ ~
.
g
~
1.
.
::; : : :-
~oi
-
8
: ::;
~
:
<s
= .9 -
-~~B
e ~-<E
<0. -
~i=::
~
<0.
I
<..~...
~
~
~
<0.
t0:.1~8 .... <1"" ""
.... ._.9...
~8~ ....3.....-
~~~
:c; <P.
~-r;
l ~~--~~L-~-2--~~--~--1 +-~--7-~~--~--~--~-'---j___
---1----~---- MN.e H--~-----
Vt -----
9728 81
851 79
___ [____ -------/-----.
821 77-1
83 70
---851
-
--85
-
-7-611
-------1~-------
------~------ - - ---
2278 29
32901' 2210 30, 20
2278 26
1144 11
1143 12
Mas ___ R. !_____
Conn --NN.. YJ --__-_Pa _____ Del_____
--+--- ________ 101 921 ----1----
-9--5~_-_---
------
111 ____ I____
79 ____ ___8_7 69 67 73
_ ___ ____
ssl 901\
86:. 82, 811 791
8ll 781 78 82
8824::--------~1------77 _____ ----
7so8__,_-_-_--1--------
--------- 31 331 23 31 14 14
---~--- ~~ --------- 31 30 20 28 16 15 --- 32 31 21 28 14l
-----
------~' ------
------!\------~------
29 31 29 27
2291
32~0~~
20 21 19 18
26 25 23 19
13l 15
1124
12 11 111 11
1
::.J~=== ~~ 1~~ ~8!-9:21-9:210.3 ~~ ~~ n ~~ t&i t& Md -----
Va -----
65 75
67 60 72 ____
791 84\
791 82
87~21[ _9___511_9_-__~10.2______\[_-_-_-~[------
25 24
26 23
16 17
19 19
131 13 12 12
s. c ----
138 135]126[ 9.1'1 9.210.2 =__=_=1-=-=-=!-=--=-= 24 24 17 18 11' 11
? GFlaa -__-_-_-_- ---- -__-_-_-\1_ --- 145 150 135! 9.4: 9 10.2 ---[--_[___ 22 22 16 17 121 12
Ohio ____
7 4
70I'
11
---- ----111.2l3.J ____ ---~---1--80 77 76 ---- _- - __ -- - -- _ - -- -- _
30 24
3~~2~
18 17
22 21
131 11
14 11
~i:l:-~~~ :~1 :: ~: ~: ~:~~~~~ ~~~~ ~~~~ :~rr~ :: ~: :~ Ind _____ 70 65. 67 77 75 74_ ___ -------- ---1---[--- 22 ., 17 19 11 10
23
10
41 14----i---- ____ Wis ____
Minn ___
:: 61 57
~o
~
73 65
72 68
70 65
66~----~----
130112li105 ----145145[105
28 25
24l 27] 17 25 16
21 20
:: 10 9
~g
9
Iowa
56 541 66 70 68 67-------- ____ 1351301105 25 2611 16 19 9!' 9
Mo ______ 7!J 67 61 81 79 75 9.119.0 9.3125,110!110 21 ::] 17 18 10 10
go ~- N. Dak _ 51
57 63 61 611- __ _______ 148143i102 21
\ 16 24 sl g
S. Dak --\ 53 ~ 1 68 63 62 66 ____ --------1451401103 21 22 15 19 8 g
Nebr Kans
------~
54 64
Ky ----- 80
51 61
72
57 61
85
65 80
87
64 74
86
668954~~)------------~-----------------------11-22-50-11-~21-07-1-,]11-00--65
20 21
20
22[ 15 22 15 20,1 15
18 17
18
8 8
10
8 g
,9
________ i:1 =: :=: UUH rl~s~:::t:: -~~~ =~~l~~~~ U~8t:: ~~ ~~ ~8 Tenn ___ 1 83 80 85 93 91 881 9 1, 9.0]10.2 ______I___ 18 181\ 15 17 10 10
Tex ---- 82 84 72'101 951 94 9.0 8.810.0 _________ 20 21 13 15 8 8
Okla ____ 66 56____ 87 82 67 8.0 8.0 9.8 ___ . __ ___ 21 22 14 16 8 8
Ark --"- _ ____
90 86 90 8.9 8.910.2
20 21 14 16 8 8
Mont
78 72 61 77 77 64 ____ ---- ____ ___ ___ ___ 30 30 26 31 13 J.4
Wyo ---- 56 75 60 75 95 75 ____ ---- _______ --- ___ 28 30 25 28 15 12
Colo---- 83 80 68 79 95 72--------------------- 29 29 21 25 12 12
N. Mex
J__ 85 85 77------------------------ _____
32 33 23 27 12 11
Ariz _____ 100 96 83 ____ ---------------- -"-- ___ ___ ___ 35 40 28 36 15 15
Utah ___ 71 62 58 78 70 63 ____ ]_ ___ ---- ___ --- --- 28 27 19 21 13 11
Nev ---- 88 80 84. ___ -------------------------- ___ 35 33 30 35 18 16
Idaho___ Wash___
68 68
68 73
50 55
76 81 95 108
8725'~1------- ----- ---- -
-
---
-----___ ---
--___
30 33
31 34
23~0 23 25
11112 13 I:t
Oreg ____ 75 75 55 106 1101 79 ____ ----------- ___ ___ 32 30 21 22 11 11
Cal _- ___ 75 74 72 94 85 8.1 --.- ---- ---- -- _ - - __ - _ 29 30 21 22 13 13
--f-----r--1---:-j--1---1---
-r::--
u.S __\tn. 2\59.466.5 77.3 75.0175.3 9 .I 9.010 2146141110324.2 Z4. 516.8 20. 110.2110.0
CONDITION OF FARM ANIMALS ON APRIL 1, AND ES'l'IMATED LOSSES DURING THE YEAR ENDING MARCH 31, 1909, WITH COMPARISONS.
State, Te.r~rrit.ory, Dvs1on.
Horses.
Cattle.
Losses from disease, year ending March 31-
.
e ~
~
" ~
..g~ ~~ s~
8
:=;
...
Con~t. t.on Apnl 1-
Losses Losses from from exdisease. posure.
1
8~ ~~
~ e
~
f
~ ~
~
" ~
~
" ~
~Q.)
~
s~ ~~ ~~ s~ ~~ ~~ 's~
.~",.-g'S"'
~ e oi
~ ~&
:'jeae;; ~~o~Q..o..".".)~.'E.~.;
Con~:.ht. wn Apnl 1-
.
fa
f!
~
~ ~
~ ~
";; s ;
M
v N
----------2.01.71.5 ff _________ l.41.41.6 ___________ 1.41.31.6
M. R
ss I
_________ _________
1.92.21.6 2.02.51.8
2,340 98 99 826 98 98
1,3{)~ 100 100 1,577 98 98
280 99 95
Co N N p
on _________ y _________ J _________ ___________
1.82.02.1 2.02.22.0 1.91.71.9 1.81.71.8
D L----------2.01.72.5
1,098 14,200
1,938 11,142
740
99 99 98 98 98 98 98.97 97 95
M y,
__________ 1.71.41.9 ___________ 1.71.81.8
2,686 5,338
97 97
94 94
w N s
ccV_a_________________________
1,71.11.6 l.72.02.o 2.12.22.7
3,315 97 3,264 97 1,785 95
95 95 93
G ___________ 2.32.02.8 3,220 96 96
F 0
' __________ 2,73.03.4 io _________ 1.41.41.4
1,458 13,412
96 97
95 97
I 1 ---------- 1. 91.81. 7 15,770 97 97
I -----------1.61.41.8 25,968 99 99
wM lh ---------1.51.61.7 11,085 98 95 A ----------1.61.41.6 10,592 97 97 N on ---------2.11.81.9 15,792 97 97 I va _________ 1.81.71.5 25,542 99 99 M ----------1.41.31.7 13,930 97 97
Ns.
Dak _______ 1.71.91.8 Dak.-------1.71.51.5
11,526 10,098
98 98
97 98
N br _________ 1.81.81.9 18,630 97 97
K: .ns ________ 1.51.11.4 17,280 96 96
K ---------- 1.81. 92.2 7,182 95 96
T on ---------1.71.82.3 5,508 96 95 A , ___________ 2.02.02.6 3,360 95 95 M 3S --------- ~.6~.52.8 6,890 95 92 La ----------- ~.Oo.23.5 6,990 95 94 T K ----------2.21.92.5 29,524 94 95
0 Ia ---------2.~2.02.2 17,182 94 95
A k ----------2.22.42.5 6,446 94 95
[M
nt
vo
--------1.41.51.9 ---------1.41.31.9
4,256 1,890
98 98 98 99
lo _________ 1,61.41.9 4,400 96 99
991. 91.51. 20.20.10 .2 991.51.41.8 .3 .2 .3 991.51.31.9 .2 .2 .2 981.72.11.9 .1 .0 .2 971.92.21.9 .1 .1 .1
992.01.81.7 .1 982.02.22.0 .4 972.02.02.3 .3 972.01.81.9 .3 961.41.22.21.0
.1 .1 .4 .4 .4 .4 .5 .5 .61.1
951.51.21.5 -~ .6 .9
962.02.02.01.~1.41.2
961.81.51.81.0 .81.3 952.02.22.01.42.01.8 952.32.62.52.71.812.4
962.72.32.4;.42.013.2
943.53.83.5~.04.03.8
971.31.41.3 .4 .6 .6
971.61.61.6 .6 .7 .7 991.51.51.7 .4 .5 .7
961.41.51.5 .5 .8 .7 971.71.81.6 .6 .5 -~ 972.01.81.71.41.0 ., 981.71.72.01.1 .4 .7 961.51.52.01.01.01.2
961.21.51.81.41.01.9 971.92.02.21.91.21.9 962.02.12.61.2 .81.6 961.71.21.7 .8 .51.2
94 2.12 .12. 21.31.31. 7
94~.12.12.61.31.52.1 94~.52.52.62.32.52.
942.72. 72.82.43.02.8
942.73.03.~3,53.54.5
922.42.02.'12.22.03.1
932.32.12.51.92.02.6 923.03.03.22.72.33.0 961.72.11.83.31.43.3 971.42.21.92.21.42.7 961.41.52.23.51.82.7
6,8041 99 99 99 3,978 97 98 98 8,534 99 99 98 5,112 98 98 97
720 97 97 97
4,620 98 99 99 64,488 98 97 96 6,256 96 94 96 48,691 97 95 96
1,440 92 96 94
5,980 96 95 94 27,904 97 95 93 21,980 96 96 94 25,432 94 93 91 18,200 93 90 91
50,541 94 93 93 50,960 92 91 90 33,065 96 96 96 38,104 96 96 96 62,244 97 97 98
35,796 96 94 95 59,248 97 97 97 79,730 96 96 95 151,984 98 98 98 80,400 96 97 94
22,802 98 97 94 77,520 98 97 94 VH,104 96 97 94 106,225 95 97 95 37,468 94 95 91
31,586 95 ~~ 91 39,984 92 g., 90 47,175 91 90 92 41,912 90 92 90 404,524 90 96 90
88,116 93 96 89 60,534 91 93 88 49,000 97 97 91 32,292 96 98 95 78,988 91 98 93
N Mex ... ----2.12.52.8
u A
iz ah
---------2.51.53.0 ---------2.92.51.8
N v ---------2.01.62.6
2,730 2,775 3,625 1,920
92 95 94 95 96 95 96 99
912.03.02.44.02.73.0 902.22.52.62.01.64.2 97 2 .02.0 1.83 .12.02.3 962.31.52.23.51.52.5
58,020 91 95 90 27,846 90 95 88 21,012 93 95 96 24,476 94 99 96
I ho -------- 1. 71.51.8 W: sh --------2.41.92.1 Or eg ---------1.92.01.9 Ca I __________ 2.0 2.0 2.0
2,686 98 99 961. 21.41.~ 1.21.52.4 7,680 98 98 961.41.71.61.21.22.0 5,681 97 98 961.51.51.71.91.12.3 8,240 98 98 97 2.12. 5 2.63 .62.0 2.4
10,152 98 99 96 14,976 96 98 96 31,008 97 98 95 90,345 94 96 94
lJ. s ------- 1.81.' 1. 9375,099 96.996.896 .v 1. 91.9 2 .11. 51.21.8 2.419.27694.996.294. 1
CONDITION QF FARM ANIMALS ON APRIL 1, AND ;BSTIMATBD LOSSES DURING THE YEAR ENDING MARCH 31,' 1909, WITH COMPARISONS.
Sheep.
Losses Losses from from exdisease. posure.
State Territory
Div0is' ion
t t
~ ~!~ ~ !
CQndition April1-
Swine.
Losses from Disease, year ending
March 31-
Condition April 1-
lie ____ 2.8 2. 2 2.4 0. 510.40.5
)[. H ---1.92.22.7 .5 .71.0 Vt -----1.82.22.3 .4 .5 .7 Mass ---2.41.91.5 .5 .7 .6 R. I ---1.61.41.7 .3 .7 .2
Conn ---1.92.12.4 N. Y ---2.42.92.4 N .J ---2.42.52.3 Pa ----- 2/1)2.62.9 DeL----2.41.62.5
.1 .1 .3 .5 .6 .7 .5 .8 .7 .91.51.3 .5 .41.4
~~-====UN~:~ UU~:~
W. Va _3.02.83.51.81.52.4
Ns..
c --- C----2.12.02.42.02.02.4 2.52.62.82.32.13.5
8,646 98 99 1,824 96 97 4,994 100 99 1,305 97 98 171 98 99
680 33,786
1,276 38,590
348
99 100 97 97 96 96 97 94 96 97
6,520 95 95 30,503 95 94 34,032 94 94
9,102 94 93 2,784 94 91
981.51.11.2 981.41.51. 7 981.41.51.9 972.12.22.1 982.02.32.2 992.12.32.2 971.91.82.1 962.82.42.8 952.72,72.8 953.32.84.6 943.32.93.6 934.24.64.6 913.02.53.5 914.06.06.9 915.45.76.9
990 98 98 IX 99
728 98 1,372 98 1,449 . 98
260 98
!~l;?
~ ,,.
!9l!9
100 100
19)88
98 100
987 100 12,711 97 4,424 97 26,730 97
1,518 96
99 100 100 97 98 99 97 97 98 96 97 911 97 95 100
339,,487512 11,250
9956 95
9936 95
g9~~5
100
1~
55,920 95 94 93 101
36,990 95 93 94 104
Ga ----- 3.13.03. 53 .02.54.1 F!a __ --3.34.03.43.03.03.8 Ohio ---2. 72.82.61.11.31.4 Ind --- 3.23. 73.11.61. 71.5 Ill------ 2.52.62.5 .91.0 1.1
Mich ---2.73.03.0 .91.21.2 Wis ----2.31.92.1 .9 .81.0 Minn ___ 2.52.02.01.21.21.1 Iowa ---2.12.52.81.0 .81.2 Mo ---- 2.82.62.71.71.31.7
N. Dak _1.72.02.21.81.83.6 S. Dak--1.92.12.22.41.62.4 Nebr --- 2.02.42.12.51.52.6 Kans __ 1,81,11.31.0 .41.1 Ky ---- 3.6j3.5j3.62.32.33.0
15,738 93 90 925.54.47.8 6,237 89 92 927.27.38.8 118,180 95 94 953.53.54.7 58,320 94 94 945.25.26.6 26,962 96 97 974.56.06.4
76,680 95 94 942.93.03.1 33,408 95 96 962.32.33.6 17,316 96 97 973.33.04.8 23,157 98 97 975.46.97.0 44,865 93 96 94 7.07.06.6
21,735 35,303
96 97
99 98
g~~:~UU
18,405 97 97 967.57.07.9
6,944 93 97 966.64.04.3
63,189 92 93 915.86.26.5
88,825 94 94 93 101 32,184 91 91 93 100 83,300 95 95 9 95 157,716 94 95 93 94 199,710 96 96 95 95
38,628 42, 182
95 96
94 97
96 ~56
100 98
38,0~? 94 97 .. 89
g; ~~:8so
~
g~
98 90
rs 5~~~8 ~ g~ ~
292:8oo 94 94 94 94 158,202 93 93 ' 93 88 71,688 92 94 92 96
Tenn --- 3.02.63.02.42.02.8 Ala--- __ 2. 72.93.52.53.03. 7 Miss --- 4.24.24.14.05.15.0 La----- 3.02.43.53.02.24.4 Tex ---- 2.71.82.72.52.43.0
18,954 93 93 915.211!.57.1 9,568 93 91 917.05.67.0 14,432 91 88 886.57.56.6 10,920 93 95 907.58.59.9 96,356 93 97 953.53.04.4
77,324 94 94 92 99
86,660 99~5 94 93 101
83,850
9 99,4 102
51,675 90 93 101
115,640 94 96 95 104
Okla ---2.U.72.01.51.01.9 Ark ----2.92.52.82.11.92.9 Mont. --4.01.31.92.52.04.0 Wyo____ 3.53 .0 1.94.83.15.2 Colo --- 2.51.9 2.13. 92.53. 7
4,080 12,650 366,210 547,053 108,480
~i
98 94
98 99
94 98
96 100
916.04.05.4 898.5~.19.9 932.01.91.7 951.52.01.3 941.83.12,1
95,280 84 95 94 90
97,750 90 92 86 100
gg 1,~~~ g~
g9;8 ~g:
2,970 99 96 Q~ 101
N. Mex- 2.02.22:65.44.24.9 Ariz --- 2.31.62.13.02.53.8 Utah ---2.21.52.04.03.74.1 Nev ---3.42.52.75.02.94.3
368,372 90 94 92 1. 7 1. 5 1. 4 55,756 '91 93 912.31.02.7 193,130 98. 98 ,961.94.21.7 130,536 98 100 962.03.02.3
544 94 97 96 110 506 99 96 94 105 1,178 98 93 98 99 300 100 99 98 110
Idaho --1.41.82.01.82.04.3 Wash --1.51.52.0 1. 71.22.8 Oreg____ 2.0 1.12.02.51.5~.8 Cal ----2.12.52.73.73.5.,.8
124,704 99 99 951.21.12.0 25,568 98 98 972.01.51.9
118,530 97 98 972.01.61.9 134,850 97 96 953.12.54.4
1,716 3,940
5,8~~
17,42
98 100 98 98 98 ~~ 98 9,
98 107 ~~ 96 !':! 99 96 99
U. R _ 2. 72.22 .42.82.33 .2 3.081,14895.4 96.794.55.15. 2 5.~ 2,761,35894.4 95.3194.0196.9
INDEX.
Agriculture .......................................... . Altitudes ............................................ . Alphabetical List of Counties ......................... . Aluminum (Bauxite) ................................. . Amethysts ........................................... . Apples .............................................. . Artesian Wells ....................................... . Assessed Valuation of all Propert~ ..... , ............... .
4-6 3-4 29-32
8 9 4-5 10 14,15
Banks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
14
Barite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9
Barley .................................. .'. . . . . . . . . . . . 4, 86-91
Bauxite .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
8
Beef Cattle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
6
Bees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114-119
Black Walnuts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
5
Buckwheat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4, 86-91
Butter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108-113
Cattle .............................................. 81, 122-127
Charitable Institutions ............................... .
17
Cherts .............................................. .
7
Chufas .............................................. .
6
Cities ............................................... . 18,19
Clays ................................................ .
9
'Climate Belts ........................................ .
41
Cloyer ........................................... , ... .
4
Coal ................................................. .
8
Commerce . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3-i
Commercial Orchards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
5
Copper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9
Corn ... ; ............................................. 79, 86-91
Corundum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
8-!!
Cotton .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5, 36-78
Cotton Manufactures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . J.0-12
Dairy Herds . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
~
Diamonds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
!!
Education ........................................... . Eggs ................................................ . Electric Lights ....................................... . Electric Car Lines .................................... . Enameled Brick
15 114-119
19 14
9
Fall Line ............................................
10
Flour Mills .......................................... .
13
Forest Timbers ....................................... .
6
Fruits ................................ ..
4; 5
Furnaces ............................................. .
12
Furniture Factories ................. ' ................. .
]2
Geology and Mining . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7, 10
Gneiss ............................................... .
8
Gold ................................................ .
7, 8
Good Roads .......................................... .
14
Granite .............................................. .
8
Graphite ............................................. .
9
Grasses .............................................. . 4, 86-97
Groundpeas .......................................... .
6
Hay ................................................ 4, 80, 8697
Highest Elevations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3
Hogs ................ , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
82
Honey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114119
Horses .............................................. 82, 128-131
Horticulture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4-6
Hydrographic Basins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
21
Irish Potatoes ........................................ 80, 98-103
Iron . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
8
J oltnson Grass ....................................... .
.j
Kaolin ............................................... .
9
Limestone ........................................... .
!)
Lumber Cut .......................................... .
::13
Mail Facilities ...................................... . Manganese .......................................... . Manufactures ........................................ . Marble ............................................... . Marls ............................................... .
14 7
Hl-13 8 9
Mica
- 0
Milk
0
Mineral Springs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9
108-113 !l
Mining . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
7-9
Moonsto11es . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9
Mules .............................................. !12, 128-131
Neat Cattle ......................................... 81, 1,22-127
Nuts .............................................. , . .
5, 6
Oats .............................................. 79, 84, 86-91
Ochre ........................ :. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
8
Orchard Grass
4
Peaches
4, 5,120
Peanuts
6
Pears . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4
Pecans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
5, 6
Phosphates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
7
Pines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6, 7, 33
Porcelain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9
Potatoes ............................................. 80, 98-103
Poultry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114-119
Pyrite .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9
Quartz ................................... .. . . . . . . . . . . .
7
Rainfall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4
Railroads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
13
Religion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
17
Rice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
15
Roads .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13-14
Rubies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9
R.ye .................................................. 79, 86-91
Sandstones .......................................... .
9
~~~fs~~rs .::::::::::::::::::::::. ::::::::::::::.: ::::::
9 8
Sea Island Cotton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5, 37-40
Sewer Piping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . .
9
Shales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
7
Sheep ............................................ 6, 81, 128,131
Sugar Cane ........................................... 5, 104, 105
Sorghum Cane . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106, 107
Sweet Potatoes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98-103
Swine .............................................. 82, 128-131
Talc ................. -, .................. -............ . Tax Rate .............................. : . ............ . Terra Cotta ............ , .......... : ................. . Tobacco .......... : . .........................-........ Topography .......................................... . Towns with Population ................. , ............. . Transportation Facilities ........ , .................... .
9 15 9 81 3,4 18,19
Vegetables (Miscellaneous) ........................... . 98-103
Water Powers .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20-28 'Vheat ............................ , ............... 79, 84, 86-91