Before wheat and the flour mills flourished, tobacco was grown as a cash crop in Maryland, including the Howard district of Anne Arundel County [later Howard County]. Tobacco depleted the soil and was more labor intensive than wheat, but continued to be grown in some eastern parts of the state. A few roads have retained their original name - Rolling Road, nearby Catonsville for example. Farmers compressed the dried tobacco leaves to thoroughly fill the hogshead to specified weight (1000 or more pounds) then those in Howard district headed for Elkridge according to Tyson (bottom).
Monday, July 25, 2016
Monday, July 11, 2016
Whipps Garden Cemetery
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Monday, July 4, 2016
Biography of Benjamin Banneker
The Life of Benjamin Banneker: The First African-American Man of Science by Silvio A. Bedini, revised and expanded, 1999. This is a fascinating and enjoyable read, heavily researched, on the life and many details of the times, of this noteworthy free African-American who owned his farm, made a working wooden clock by studying a watch, and was able to learn complicated mathematical equations and astronomy, which would be showcased in 6 years of Almanacs; and he helped for the first couple months of the survey of Washington City. But with all his accomplishments, many myths have appeared in books and on the web, which the author corrects.
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