5.1 FARMS AND CITIES
IN THE EARLY REPUBLIC
1750 - 1820

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2. Modes of Production
  • Hunting-gathering mode of production.
    • Native American societies.
  • Slave mode of production.
    • Tobacco and cotton south.
  • Subsistence mode of production.
    • Each family owns its own means of production; family farm.
    • Production is oriented toward use values; subsistence; barter economy.
    • Each family reproduces its own labor force.
3. Production and Reproduction
  • Production
    • Land (natural resources), labor, and capital.
    • Technology (tools; instruments of labor).
    • Relations of production: cooperation or exploitation.
  • Reproduction
    • Biological: Reproduction of labor force.
    • Daily Life: Food, clothing, shelter, energy.
    • Socialization (community)
    • Governance (state: democracy).
4. 18th Century United States: Dual Economies
  • Coastal exporting (mercantile) economy
    • Tobacco, rice, indigo, wheat, timber products.
    • Oriented toward production.
  • Inland subsistence-oriented economy
    • Uplands of New England; Appalachians.
    • Small towns; 25-30 miles from navigable rivers or urban centers.
    • Oriented toward reproduction.
  • Tensions: Capitalism (inequality) vs. democracy (equality).
5. Crevecoeur's Agrarian Ideal
  • Crevecoeur: French lesser nobility; traveled in eastern N. America (1759-90).
  • Letters from an American Farmer (1782).
  • "What is an American: This new man?"
  • Agrarian ideal: property + work ethic = upward mobility; success; prosperity.
  • Politics: "silken bonds of mild government;" equitable laws.
  • Soil nurtures the farmer;
like a plant. 6. Jefferson's Agrarian Ideal
  • Notes on the State of Virginia, 1787.
  • Promotes agrarian ideal of independent farmer.
  • "Those who labor in the earth are the chosen people of God."
  • Agrarian ideal ignores reality of slavery.
7. Jefferson and Democracy
  • Rule by ordinary people rather than elites. Political equality.
  • Independent yeoman farmer owns "his" own labor and property. Economic equality.
  • Manufacturing should stay in Europe (promotes economic inequality).
  • Contradictions: Jefferson as promoter of agrarian democracy; as slave-owning Virginia planter (mercantile capitalism).
8. Jefferson as Planter
  • 10,000 acres; 187 slaves in 1774; kind to slaves; good provider of food, housing, blankets
  • Alleged to have had mulatto children by Sally Hemings; evidence inconclusive (Case made by Fawn Brodie T.J.: An Intimate History, 1974)
9. Jefferson as Agriculturalist
  • Experiments with agricultural improvement.
  • Tobacco depletes the soil; wheat improves it.
10. Production and Ecology
  • Rapid soil exhaustion and deforestation in mercantile exporting sector of economy.
  • Tobacco south monocultures;
  • New England timber economy.
  • Slower depletion of resources (soil and forests) in subsistence-oriented sector.
  • Long-fallow (swidden system).
  • 2-3 acres cultivated; then pasture; then reversion to woods; rotations; mixed crops.
11. Production: Subsistence Farming in New England
  • Land: Private property; 40-80 acres.
  • Pine/hardwoods.
  • Clearing in woods.
  • Wooden cabin.
  • Use value economy: bartering with neighbors.
  • Rail fences keep cattle out of crops.
12. Production:Labor for Clearing Land
  • Stumps cut off at waist height.
  • Saves scarce labor.
  • Looks ugly, according to European travelers.
  • Wood for potash: Sold for fertilizer and glassmaking.
13. Production: Oxen for animal muscle
  • 1-2 oxen or horses on most subsistence farms.
  • Oxen stronger, cheaper, live longer than horses; less likely to be injured or break a leg.
  • Could be eaten; horses were not.
14. Production: Carey Plow
  • Wrought iron plowshare: cuts soil at furrow.
  • Curved iron moldboard: turns soil over.
  • Colter: sharp wheel on front of plow beam cuts and breaks soil first.
15. Production: Harrow
  • Wood or metal filled; spikes.
  • Dragged over field after plowing to break up clods.
  • Dragged again to cover seeds.
16. Reproduction of Daily Life: Farm Cabin for Shelter
  • Reproduction of Daily Life: Shelter, food, clothing, energy.
  • Logs cut and split.
  • Cooperative house and barn raising.
  • First cabin.
  • Substantial house later.
  • Gendered spaces.
17. Reproduction of Daily Life: Mixed Cropping for Food
  • Potatoes; rye; pole beans; 3 field system.
  • 2-3 acres (average) in cultivation; crop rotations.
  • Mixed cropping has ecological advantages over monocultures.
18. Reproduction of Daily Life: Sheep for Woolen Clothing
  • Part of Diamond's "major five."
  • Wool essential for clothing.
  • Mutton; lamb for food.
  • 6-10 sheep (average) for subsistence.
19. Reproduction of Daily Life: Spinning Wool into Clothing
  • Distaff holds the raw wool or flax.
  • Wool is drawn from distaff and twisted into thread.
  • Thread is wound around spindle.
  • Spinning wheel, operated by hand or by walking, turns the spindle.
20. Reproduction of Daily Life: Mill for Energy Supply
  • Waterwheel: renewable energy.
  • Mill dam: creates millpond.
  • Mill pond: holds water for millrace.
  • Millrace: channels water to mill wheel.
  • Millers: usually well-to-do farmers.
  • Food, Cloth, planks.
21. Link to Market Economy: Country Store
  • Link to outside markets.
  • Storekeeper well-off.
  • Account books for bartering goods.
  • Local production of barrels, brooms, shoes, corn, grain, threshers.
  • Imported guns, coffee, china, kettles, shovels.
22. Presettlement Forest, 1700
  • Coniferous: white pine, hemlock.
  • Deciduous: red and white oak; white ash, red maple, American chestnut, hickory.
23. Subsistence to Market Farming
  • Petersham, Mass. (now Harvard Forest).
  • Subsistence Farming, 1740.
  • Intensive market farming, 1830.
24. Forests Cleared
  • Height of farming and forest harvest, 1840 (market revolution in New England).
  • Farms abandoned to forest, 1850 (settlement and market move westward).
25. Portable Sawmills
  • Railroads and portable sawmills extend lumbering industry inland.
26. Market Farming
  • Benjamin Rush, "German Farmers of Pennsylvania," 1789 (Penn. Dutch).
  • Crops grown for Philadelphia market; transported by Lancaster Turnpike.
  • Influence of German agricultural improvement movement.
  • Large heated barns; high fences; large wagons, 4 horses; wheat, vegetables.
27. Market Farming
  • Agricultural improvement: fertilizers; manure and legumes to restore nitrogen; fish and guano for phosphorus; potash for potassium; lime, marl, and gypsum for calcium.
  • Intensive agriculture: deep plowing; horses; account books; numbered fields; records; management; county fairs.
  • Profit motive; harder work; hired hands.
28. Questions for Discussion
  • What tensions exist between democracy and capitalism?
  • What is "human nature"? Is it formed by nature (genetics) or culture (societal conditions)?
  • What is environmental determinism and what problems are raised by it?