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Tobacco in Colonial Virginia
Table of Contents
The history of tobacco is the history of
Jamestown and of Virginia. No one staple or
resource ever played a more significant role
in the history of any state or nation. The
growth of the Virginia Colony, as it
extended beyond the limits of Jamestown, was
governed and hastened by the quest for
additional virgin soil in which to grow this
"golden weed." For years the extension into
the interior meant the expansion of tobacco
production. Without tobacco the development
of Virginia might have been retarded 200
years.
Tobacco was the life and soul of the
colony; yet a primitive, but significant,
form of diversified farming existed from the
very beginning especially among the small
farmers. Even with the development of the
large plantations in the eighteenth century,
there were quite a number of small
landowners interspersed among the big
planters in the Tidewater area, and they
were most numerous in the Piedmont section.
They usually possessed few slaves, if any,
and raised mostly grains, vegetables and
stock which they could easily sell to
neighboring tobacco planters. The negligible
food imports by the colony indicates that a
regular system of farming existed. Nor was
tobacco the sole product of the large
tobacco plantations. This is indicated by
the fact that practically all of the
accounts of the product of one man's labor
were recorded as so many pounds or acres of
tobacco plus provisions. And had the
plantations not been generally
self-sufficient, the frequently extremely
low prevailing tobacco prices would have
made the agricultural economy even less
profitable.
Tobacco was a completely new agricultural
product to most, if not all, of the English
settlers at Jamestown. There were no
centuries of vast experience in growing,
curing, and marketing to draw upon. These
problems and procedures were worked out by
trial and error in the wilderness of
Virginia. Tobacco became the only dependable
export and the colony was exploited for the
benefit of English commerce. This English
commercial policy, plus other factors,
caused the Virginia planter to become
somewhat of an agricultural spendthrift. For
nearly 200 years he followed a system of
farming which soon exhausted his land. Land
was cheap and means of fertilization was
limited and laborious. By clearing away the
trees he was able to move north, south,
southwest, and west and replace his worn-out
fields with rich virgin soil necessary to
grow the best tobacco.
While struggling with the problems
involved in producing an entirely new crop
about which they knew little or nothing, the
colonists also had to feed themselves, deal
with their racial problems, and maintain a
stable local government as they continually
expanded in a limitless wilderness. Out of
all this chaos grew the mother and leader of
the American colonies.
Tobacco penetrated the social, political,
and economic life of the colony. Ownership
of a large tobacco plantation could take one
up the social ladder; many of the men
responsible for the welfare of the colony
were planters, and everything could be paid
for in tobacco. In 1620 the indentured
servants were paid for with tobacco, the
young women sent to the colonists to become
wives were purchased by paying their
transportation charges with tobacco. The
wages of soldiers and the salaries of
clergymen and governmental officials were
paid in tobacco. After 1730 tobacco notes,
that is warehouse receipts, representing a
certain amount of money, served as currency
for the colony.
The development of the inspection system
with its chain of tobacco warehouses
hastened urbanization. Around many of these
warehouses grew villages and settlements;
some of these eventually became towns and
cities. Richmond, Petersburg, Danville,
Fredericksburg, Farmville, Clarksville and
others were once merely convenient landings
or locations for tobacco warehouses. Even
today the fragrant aroma of cured tobacco
still exists in a number of these places
during the tobacco marketing season. The
tobacco trade was largely responsible for
the birth and growth of Alexandria,
Dumfries, and Norfolk into important
export-import centers. For her birth,
growth, and colonial leadership, Virginia
pays her respect to John Rolfe and the other
brave settlers at Jamestown.
Tobacco is still [1957] a vital factor in
Virginia's economy. Of approximately
2,000,000 acres of cropland (pastureland
excluded) in 1949, 115,400 were planted in
tobacco which produced 124,904,000 pounds
valued at $55,120,800 or twenty-three
percent of the total value of all
agricultural crops. Of the four largest
agricultural products--poultry, tobacco,
meat animals, and milk--tobacco ranked
second only to poultry in terms of income in
1955. Poultry produced an income of
$99,935,000, tobacco $84,128,000, meat
animals $80,564,000, and milk $70,681,000.
Peanuts and fruits were tied for fifth
place, each producing an income of about
$21,000,000.
Of the many different industries in
Virginia today [1957] only five--food,
textile, wearing apparel, chemical, and the
manufacture of transportation
equipment--employ more workers than the
tobacco manufacturers. In 1953 a total of
$40,000,000, in salaries and wages, was paid
to production workers in the tobacco
manufacturing industry in Virginia.
Although tobacco is no longer "king" in
the Old Dominion, Virginia farmers produce
enough of the "golden weed" each year to
make one long cigarette that would stretch
around the world fifty times.
Table of Contents
Notes About Book:
Source: Tobacco in Colonial Virginia,
by Melvin Herndon. Published 1957, at
Williamsburg, Virginia.
Online Publication: This manuscript has
been completely edited, and should be free
from any errors.
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