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Question about Texas
TV program prop anomaly | 12/26/09 | DGHoodini

Posted on 12/26/2009 6:33:27 PM PST by DGHoodini

Just a quick question, that I am pretty sure I already know the answer to, but have a nagging doubt about:

Was cotton ever a cash crop in Texas?

I keep thinking 'No', but as I said, I'm getting a little voice in my head saying:"it might'a been...".

Anyone know the answer?


TOPICS: Agriculture; Business/Economy; Chit/Chat; History
KEYWORDS: cotton; crops; dumbquestion; history; texas
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To: Richard Kimball

This thread brings back a lot of memories. Back in the 50’s my Daddy had quit farming and was working at Eglin AFB, but our Uncle Buck grew a lot of cotton and I was glad of the chance to make money.

It really was hard work tho. I remember the first trip to the cotton gin in Geneva, Alabama which is just across the state line. Uncle Buck paid us in cash and the first thing I bought with my money was a monopoly set.


41 posted on 12/26/2009 7:09:03 PM PST by yarddog
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To: DGHoodini

Yes.........Carson County Cotton Gin has truck bales laying all over the place right now up in the Panhandle and South of Lubbock cotton as far as ya can see !

http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-123764993.html

Been up and running in Carson County Cotton Gin for last two or three years or more I believe.


42 posted on 12/26/2009 7:09:48 PM PST by Squantos (Be polite. Be professional. But have a plan to kill everyone you meet)
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To: DGHoodini

What did the Silk Worm ever do for Texas?


43 posted on 12/26/2009 7:12:13 PM PST by JohnD9207 (REGISTERED RIGHT WING THUG!)
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To: DGHoodini

Yes, indeed, it was.

Cotton root rot is a problem and is one reason that much land has been taken out of cotton production, particularly in the blacklands of North Texas.


44 posted on 12/26/2009 7:13:09 PM PST by Jedidah
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To: DGHoodini

In addition to The Lone Star State, California is also a major cotton producing state. I remember driving through the Central Valley in early November, 1991, and seeing these giant rectangular “piles” of cotton here and there. Each pile was the size of a semi-trailer and had a tarp tied to the top of the pile. A number was spray painted on the side of each rectangular “pile” of cotton.

Unfortunately, about two weeks later a dust storm blew through this same area. There was a massive pile-up of cars and trucks on Interstate 5, and around 19 people lost their lives.


45 posted on 12/26/2009 7:17:04 PM PST by july4thfreedomfoundation (A Jimmy Carter got us a Ronald Reagan.....a Barack Obama will get us a Sarah Palin)
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To: DGHoodini
When Major General Gordon Granger landed in Galveston, Texas to take over reconstruction his first order was that all cotton was to be turned over to US troops.
46 posted on 12/26/2009 7:18:25 PM PST by Deaf Smith
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To: DGHoodini

Probably because the Ewings only dealt in oil and misbehavior.


47 posted on 12/26/2009 7:33:36 PM PST by mamelukesabre
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To: july4thfreedomfoundation
giant rectangular “piles” of cotton here and there. Each pile was the size of a semi-trailer and had a tarp tied to the top of the pile

Those are called "modules". You see them everywhere in Texas/

48 posted on 12/26/2009 7:33:58 PM PST by B-Chan (Catholic. Monarchist. Texan. Any questions?)
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To: GeronL

“My daddy was a cotton picker when he was a kid, the whole family did it. Yes, they were poor.”

So was mine...he grew up on a share-cropping farm, picked cotton from sun up to sun down for 50 cents a day. Said it made every job he had after that seem easy by comparison.


49 posted on 12/26/2009 7:36:15 PM PST by Magic Fingers
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To: mylife

The breakfast at Cotton Gin are awesome!!!


50 posted on 12/26/2009 7:41:50 PM PST by TheMom (I'm now a grandma! Welcome to the world Kaiden Thomas.)
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To: DGHoodini

Let me introduce you to the South Plains of Texas...


51 posted on 12/26/2009 7:42:20 PM PST by Army Air Corps (Four fried chickens and a coke)
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To: TheMom

I truly enjoy that place.

And now I have a wifi laptop thaks to Santa to drip gravy on while I have breakfast there LoL


52 posted on 12/26/2009 7:45:38 PM PST by mylife (The Roar Of the Masses Could Be Farts)
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To: himno hero

No. One cotton crop per farm per year.


53 posted on 12/26/2009 7:45:55 PM PST by JustaDumbBlonde
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To: DGHoodini
If your question is actually "was Texas a slave state?"

The answer is yes, but IIRC (and I might err) slavery itself wasn't a factor in the economy, or even society (unless you count the Spanish/Mexican versions).

Texas had horses, cows, and cotton, it was a major trade center for the South (and sold to the north as well) until the very end of the war. Then it gave birth to much of the post war cowboy mythology because all those famous trails started there.

54 posted on 12/26/2009 7:46:31 PM PST by norton
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To: DGHoodini

You can still see cotton fields southwest of Houston.


55 posted on 12/26/2009 7:47:35 PM PST by Rocky (Obama's ego: The "I's" have it.)
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To: july4thfreedomfoundation
Those "piles" are called modules and are cotton that has been mechanically packed into the rectangular shape by a machine called a module builder that is attached to and run off the pto of a tractor. The letters and numbers painted on the side of the modules identify the owner and the farm number.

The modules are picked up by a large truck with a tilt bed and rows of chains that drag that module of cotton into the back of the truck. Reversing the chains deposits the module back on the ground at the gin.

56 posted on 12/26/2009 7:53:14 PM PST by JustaDumbBlonde
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To: yarddog

If my memory serves me, Geneva has switched from cotton to meth production.


57 posted on 12/26/2009 7:58:49 PM PST by goseminoles
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To: norton

While you are right, that I did a poor job of phasing my question, it was not that I wanted to know if Texas had been a “slave state”, I knew it was. My question would have been better asked as: ‘Was Texas a major Cotton producer pre-Civil War?’ It was more about economy and employmet in Texas, than about slavery, per se. I just didn’t think that cotton was produced in great amounts in Texas before there was suitable transportation routes developed to get the cotton crops to market. Unlike the SE & SC areas that had easy river and ocean/Gulf access to shipping.


58 posted on 12/26/2009 8:02:58 PM PST by DGHoodini (Iran Azadi!)
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To: yarddog
Lots of memories.

We hoed it, sprayed for boll weevils, and picked it from dawn til dark.

When I was a kid it seemed like the toe sack was a mile long. I remember it held about 50 lbs.

59 posted on 12/26/2009 8:09:47 PM PST by Dallas
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To: Richard Kimball

My mother hated picking it too.

When I was a boy in Texas we used to sing this song in school, “the boll weevil”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wc9wfJ5mw6Y


60 posted on 12/26/2009 8:10:54 PM PST by ansel12 (Traitor Earl Warren's court 1953-1969, libertarian hero, anti social conservative loser.)
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