Colonial Farming and Food: Famine to Prosperity (2024)

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By Tim Saenger, North Carolina State University, 2013

Colonial Farming and Food: Famine to Prosperity (1)Food, next to water, is the most important need to support human life. Modern American society has grown comfortable with the ease of obtaining food; it has forgotten the long history of food development and growth that expanded from the hunting and gathering days of the earliest American colonists. In colonial America, before the grocery store, men and women had to hunt, gather, or cultivate food, and at times wait for shipments from Europe, in order to survive. The work needed to secure sustenance molded society and the way colonists lived and expanded in America in colonial times.

Famine, Starvation, and Jamestown Cannibalism

Modern Thanksgiving feasts contrast sharply with the experience of Pilgrims and Indians at the first Thanksgiving: on today’s table there is an abundance of food including a large turkey, mashed potatoes, sqaush, corn, stuffing, cranberry sauce, and other staples. However, this is not an accurate picture of feasts or daily life in colonial times. Early explorers described an abundance of food and claimed the land full of wild animals and plants. This gave the impression that colonists would have no trouble having an adequate supply of food. However, long, cold winters held many colonies captive by famine, and with inadequate farming in early settlements, colonists were dependent upon trade with Native Americans or supplies from England to replenish stores. Stores depleted quickly, and despite new supplies from England, colonists were at times barely able to make it through the winter, resorting to “half rations”.

Starvation was a real threat in early settlements. The "Starving Time" at the Jamestown (Virginia) colony during the winter of 1609-1610 was noted by John Smithand George Percy, the president of the colony, and referred to by Percy as “"this starveinge Tyme". And although there are written accounts of Jamestown cannibalism, it was not until the discovery of a female body, dubbed “Jane”, that physical evidence was found to support the writings of colonists in Jamestown. The victim, “Jane”, unearthed by Jamestown Archeaologists in 2012 in a 17th century trash deposit in a cellar of a 1608 building at James Fort, showed evidence of a butchered skull and shinbone. This discovery helps us fathom the starvation of Jamestown and the desperate situation the colonists were in to survive. Cannibalism, however, was not widespread. The limited number of accounts of these events (with possibly only one first-hand report) has lead historians to believe that this was a small contained event in Jamestown that only a few desperate colonists took part in. Still, food scarcity and starvation were prominent among settlements including North Carolina.

The Thirteen Colonies: Farming with a Fat Stomach

Although off to a rocky start, the colonies became great food producers in good time. Once the British colonists solidified their hold in the new world, access to food proved to be different from of the days of John Smith and colonial Jamestown. Indentured servitude and slavery granted colonists an extended workforce to expand farming capabilities and increase their wealth. Colonists grew enough food to support their families and in some cases were able to step away from subsistence to trade, barter, and sell.

The harvests gathered by colonial farmers included an expansive number of crops: beans, squash, peas, okra, pumpkins, peppers, tomatoes, and peanuts. Maize (corn), and later rice and potatoes were grown in place of wheat and barley which were common European crops that did not take readily to eastern American soil. Probably one of the most important contributions to colonial food was the adoption of Native American agricultural practice and crops, chiefly corn and tobacco. Tobacco was a valuable export and corn, debatably the most important crop in colonial America, was used to feed both people and livestock. Colonists also harvested wild animals from hunting and fishing to supplement their diet with important protein. These included rabbit, squirrel, possum, raccoon, deer, bear, and fowl as well as many types of fish and shellfish.

Indentured servitude, followed by slavery, bolstered the farm production of colonial America, particularly in the southern colonies. Indentured servants, white immigrants from England, were the first population to cultivate the land under a master. Ideally these workers would work off their immigration debt and later buy their own land to cultivate, however, this was not always the case and indentured servants often became victim to a perpetual cycle of an inescapable labor system. Beginning in 1619 with the importation of the first African slaves, the agriculture system throughout the eastern seaboard grew quickly, and by 1700 slavery had displaced indentured servitude in the southern colonies. Before the advent of mechanized tools, farming during colonial times was hand-labour agriculture, accomplished by the hoe, scythe, and axe, and plow. These tools, in conjunction with cheap labor made available by slaves, allowed for increasingly sustaining harvests and the production of crops for trade.

References:

Bergstrom, Alexander, "English Game Laws and Colonial Food Shortages." The New England Quarterly Vol. 12, No. 4 (1939): 682-683.

Cochrane, Willard W. The Development of American Agriculture: A Historical Analysis Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1993.

Dawdy, Shannon Lee. "A Wild Taste: Food and Colonialism in Eighteenth-Century Louisiana." Ethnohistory Vol. 57, No. 3 (2010): 389.

Herrmann, Rachel B. "The "tragicall historie": Cannibalism and Abundance in Colonial Jamestown." The William and Mary Quarterly, Vol. 68, No 1 (2011):47-74 .

Neely, Paula. "Jamestown Colonists Resorted to Cannibalism." May 1, 2013. News, National Geographic. https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/130501-jamestown-cannibalism-archeology-science(accessed October 16, 2014).

Zierden, Martha A. and Reitz, Elizabeth J., "Animal Use and the Urban Landscape in Colonial Charleston, South Carolina, USA." International Journal of Historical Archaeology (2009).https://www.praguehotelsweb.com/phdtreeorg(accessed October 16, 2014).

Additional Resources:

Percy, George. "A True Relation of the Proceedings and Occurrences of Moment which have happened in Virginia.. .London, 1624." Jamestown: 1609-10: "Starving Time." National Humanities Center.http://nationalhumanitiescenter.org/pds/amerbegin/settlement/text2/JamestownPercyRelation.pdf (accessed October 16, 2014).

Schlotterbeck, John T. 2013. Daily life in the colonial South.Santa Barbara: Greenwood.

McWilliams, James E. 2005. A revolution in eating: how the quest for food shaped America. New York: Columbia University Press.

Kulikoff, Allan. 2000. From British peasants to colonial American farmers. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. https://site.ebrary.com/id/10273414(accessed October 16, 2014).

Anderson, V. D. 2004.Creatures of Empire: How domestic animals transformed early America.Oxford:University Press.

Carney, J.2001.Black rice: The African origins of rice cultivation in the Americas.

Cambridge:Harvard UniversityPress.

Gray, L. C.1932.The history of agriculture in the southern United States to 1860, vol. 1.Washington DC: CarnegieInstitution, .

Hooker, R. J.1981.Food and drink in America: A history.

Indianapolis:Bobbs-Merrill.

Hume, Ivor Noel. "We are starved." Colonial Williamsburg. https://www.colonialwilliamsburg.org/(accessed October 16, 2014).

Image Credits:

Asbestos. "Corncobs." Photograph. Wikimedia.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maize (accessed October 16, 2014). Used with Creative Commons license CC By-SA 2.0.

Subjects:

Agriculture

Colonial period (1600-1763)

Farmers

Food and drink

16 October 2014

Colonial Farming and Food: Famine to Prosperity (2024)

FAQs

Colonial Farming and Food: Famine to Prosperity? ›

This gave the impression that colonists would have no trouble having an adequate supply of food. However, long, cold winters held many colonies captive by famine, and with inadequate farming in early settlements, colonists were dependent upon trade with Native Americans or supplies from England to replenish stores.

How did colonization cause food shortages and starvation? ›

This enabled the export of these products to European countries, bringing economic benefits to the colonial powers. This focus on a limited number of export crops resulted in serious food shortages as agricultural efforts were redirected away from diverse crops and meeting local needs.

How did colonialism change farming and contribute to famine in some countries? ›

In conclusion, colonialism changed farming practices in many countries by introducing cash crops, imposing taxes and forced labor, disrupting traditional trade networks, and concentrating land ownership. These changes, combined with natural disasters, led to famines in many colonized countries.

How did colonial policies suppress peasant farming and local food production? ›

These included the imposition of foreign crops and agricultural systems, the privatization of communal lands, the introduction of cash crop production for export, the introduction of taxes on local produce, and the displacement of small farmers and their replacement with large-scale plantations run by foreign companies ...

Why were farmers in the Middle Colonies prosperous? ›

Because the soil was so rich and fertile, many middle colonists farmed. They farmed more than they could eat, so many used the rivers to export their extra crops to the cities. They would sell their goods in cities like Philadelphia and New York.

How does colonization affect food? ›

Since food was an indicator of status and Indigenous people could enhance their status with colonists by taking on Spanish culture, many Indigenous people adopted Spanish practices, cuisine included, as a way of securing a higher status in colonial society.

How did colonialism affect agriculture? ›

Gradually, all the countries of Africa, the Americas, and Asia became European colonies. European rulers employed new management systems in their colonies. They organized agriculture to focus on the establishment of plantations of cash crops, replacing traditional farming to maximize profits.

What was the most brutal colonial power? ›

One of the most brutal colonial experiences occurred in the Congo, where the Belgian government imposed a system of racial segregation, barred Congolese from nearly all higher education opportunities, and prohibited free speech, assembly, and travel.

Why did famines occur in colonies? ›

Khondker (1986) claimed that pre-British famines were caused by localized food shortages for a limited time, but colonial famines were caused by repeated economic crises when a significant number of people were unemployed with no income to buy food.

What is the main cause for famine and depopulation? ›

It is the presence of conflict, or abuses of political power that can block food supplies from reaching populations which represents the most pertinent trigger of 'death-dealing' famines today.

What were some of the reasons why farming was so difficult in the New England colonies? ›

The soil was rocky, which made farming difficult. The New England colonies had very harsh winters and mild summers. This made the growing season only about five months long. Because the soil was rocky and the climate was often harsh, colonists in New England only farmed enough to feed their families.

Why did farms and farmers struggle so much during the end of the 1920s through the 1930s? ›

After World War I, farmers were left with the heavy debts they were encouraged to take on during the war. They owned more land and more equipment than they needed, while demand for their product significantly decreased. Market surplus led land and agricultural prices to plummet. Government relief was not provided.

How were farmers treated in colonial society? ›

Farmers held another social position in colonial America. These men, though not wealthy like the planters, were often respected members of the community. They farmed the land of their region and often depended on family members for labor. Some even owned a few slaves.

What helped the Middle Colonies grow and prosper? ›

The Middle Colonies had much fertile soil, which allowed the area to become a major exporter of wheat and other grains. The lumber and shipbuilding industries were also successful in the Middle Colonies because of the abundant forests, and Pennsylvania was moderately successful in the textile and iron industries.

Why did the Middle Colonies grow prosperous in the early 1700s? ›

The Middle Colonies' agriculture grew large amounts of wheat, corn, and rye. They were considered the breadbasket of the colonies and exported food crops to both the colonies of New England and the South and to other British colonies around the world.

Why did so many colonists farm even if on a limited scale? ›

Indentured servitude and slavery granted colonists an extended workforce to expand farming capabilities and increase their wealth. Colonists grew enough food to support their families and in some cases were able to step away from subsistence to trade, barter, and sell.

Why did the colonists not have enough food? ›

Moreover, by autumn it became obvious that the colonists had insufficient food to get them through the winter. Not enough land had been cleared and not enough crops had been planted and harvested. Part of the problem here was that the "gentlemen" resisted working like mere laborers.

What are the causes of food shortages that lead to starvation? ›

Interconnected issues of poverty, inequity, conflict, climate change, gender discrimination, and weak government and health systems all play a role in keeping nutritious food out of reach for millions of families around the world.

What problems did the settlers have with their food supply? ›

This gave the impression that colonists would have no trouble having an adequate supply of food. However, long, cold winters held many colonies captive by famine, and with inadequate farming in early settlements, colonists were dependent upon trade with Native Americans or supplies from England to replenish stores.

What were the effects of colonialism on indigenous food production systems? ›

Disengagement with subsistence activities, including hunting, because of colonial policies has resulted in increasingly sedentary lifestyles and an inevitable push towards consumption of market foods with higher levels of sugar, salt, and additives [6].

References

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