HEMPOLOGY.ORG: THE STUDY OF HEMP
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Pubdate: 1900
Source: 1899 Yearbook of the United States Department of Agriculture
Author: James Wilson, Secretary of the Department of Agriculture
Page: 64
REPORT OF THE SECRETARY - HEMP
Our imports of hemp fiber for the past five years have averaged
in value $678,475 annually, coming chiefly from Italy and southern
Russia. This hemp is worth about 7 cents per pound and is used
principally in the manufacture of carpet warps. In addition, we
import an unknown but doubtless large amount of manufactured hemp
in the form of the cheaper grades of linen. The domestic product
of hemp reported by the last census, at a valuation of 3 cents
per pound, was worth $690,660 and was grown chiefly in Kentucky.
This hemp is used principally in place of jute butts for cordage
purposes. The Kentucky hemp producers grow a short plant in small
areas with shallow plowing and little or no fertilizing. The crop
is reaped and broken by hand, and the fiber is extracted by the
process of dew retting. In addition to these heavy charges, an
annual rental, averaging probably $10 per acre, is ordinarily
paid for the land. There is a reasonable prospect of establishing
an extensive hemp industry in the United States on new lines,
involving the use of either a taller variety or two crops of the
short variety, growing the crop on large areas of cheap land,
plowing deep, putting on the necessary fertilizers, reaping and
breaking by machinery, and using the process of water retting.