Traditional Muzzleloading Association

The Center of Camp => People of the Times => Topic started by: Craig Tx on February 02, 2021, 09:13:29 AM

Title: 2/2/1830: Cotton comes to the Rio Grande valley
Post by: Craig Tx on February 02, 2021, 09:13:29 AM
On this day in 1830, business partners John Stryker and James Wiley Magoffin arrived at Matamoros in the sloop Washington.

They made port carrying a newly designed cotton gin and several hundred bags of upland cotton seed and set out distributing free seed to landowners in the Rio Grande Valley. Magoffin eventually moved to Chihuahua, but Stryker purchased property along the Rio Grande. Stryker, an agriculturalist, was appointed consul for the port of Goliad (later the port of Matagorda) by President Andrew Jackson in 1835. He bought a league of land in Victoria, where he was living at the time of his death in 1844. His efforts in cotton seed distribution and the introduction of the cotton gin enabled the profitable cotton culture of the Rio Grande Valley. Years later those same cotton fields provided the pathway for the dreaded boll weevil’s entry into the United States.
Title: Re: 2/2/1830: Cotton comes to the Rio Grande valley
Post by: Butler Ford 40 on February 02, 2021, 11:08:09 AM
"COTTON IS KING" Long live KING COTTON!  Except for a small town in Alabama where they discovered that their soil and climate were perfect for peanuts.
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/agricultural-pest-honored-herald-prosperity-enterprise-alabama-180963506/
(Graduating flight school classes from FT. Rucker would try to steal the weevil, sometimes succeeding. )
Title: Re: 2/2/1830: Cotton comes to the Rio Grande valley
Post by: Oldetexian on February 02, 2021, 09:43:14 PM
A lot of my uncles grew cotton when I was a youngun, just growing up...I remember hoeing cotton as well as picking cotton...I was only 6-7, but I distinctly remember that picking was far more fun than hoeing...those rows were so long you couldn't even see the end of 'em... :lol sign