Historical Timeline
Agricultural Snapshot 1850
Agricultural EventsÂ
1850 — Total population: 23,191,786; Farm population: 11,680,000 (estimated); Farmers made up 64% of labor force; Number of farms: 1,449,000; Average acres: 203
The 1850s — Commercial corn and wheat belts began to develop; wheat occupied the newer and cheaper land west of the corn areas and was constantly being forced westward by rising land values and the encroachment of the corn areas
The 1850s — Alfalfa is grown on the west coast
The 1850s — Successful farming on the prairies began
1850 — With the California gold rush, the frontier bypassed the Great Plains and the Rockies and moved to the Pacific coast
By 1850, about 75–90 labor-hours were required to produce 100 bushels of corn (2-1/2 acres) with walking plow, harrow, and hand planting
The 1850s — Steam and clipper ships improved overseas transportation
1850–1862 — Free land was a vital rural issue
The 1850s — Major railroad trunk lines from eastern cities crossed the Appalachian Mountains
1850–1870 — Expanded market demand for agricultural products brought adoption of improved technology and resulting increases in farm production
1854 — Self-governing windmill perfected
1854 — Graduation Act reduced price of unsold public lands
1856 — 2-horse straddle-row cultivator patented
1858 — Grimm alfalfa introduced
1859–1875 — The miners’ frontier moved eastward from California toward the westward-moving farmers’ and ranchers’ frontier