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History of Cherokee County


History of Cherokee County
Compiled and Published by Cherokee County Historical Society
 from the pages of Cherokee Times - January 1878

Crops, Livestock Raising & Fencing in 1878
                       
                        CROPS

Wheat is so far the principal crop, being best adapted for subduing the land. The yield averages from 15 to 20 bushels per acre. It is grown very extensively, shipments from the county some seasons having bone as high as 120 cars of the cereal. Individual farmers have as high as 400 acres to wheat, and in every township a dozen or more can be found who sow upwards of 100 acres annually. These two years last past farmers have been more generally diverting their attention to corn growing, as a complement to stock raising. Corn does exceedingly well, costs much less labor and owing to the high price of hogs for four years has been more profitable. From 35 to 60 bushels per acres may be relied upon; its cultivation is very extensive, being fed to stock, not as a general thing grown for sale. Oats yield from 40 to 100 bushels per acres, and used exclusively for horse feed. Barley, rye, and in fact all staple grain does well.

                        LIVESTOCK RAISING
Limiting the term stock raising to the production of cattle and hogs, it is one of the principal sources of revenue of this region. Cattle cost almost nothing to raise. In summer the pasture ranges are so extensive that a thousand cattle might be fed where there in now but one; also millions of tons of grass are annually lost because there is no one to profit by its use. The same kind of grass the cattle eat in summer is cut and stalked for winter use. This hay is very nutritious; it and corn is all that is fed to beeves in winter. It is but the work of a few days to put up a hundred tons of prairie hay, ample feed for 50 to 60 head of cattle. The market for live stock is always good; drovers are ever ready to buy and pay cash for stock. In the neighborhood of 100 cars of stock cattle were shipped from Cherokee during 1877, representing an income to the farmer of $100,000.

Hog raising is now conducted on an extensive scale, forming the principal item of revenue to the farmer. From 1873 to the fall of '77, the price per 100 pounds, live weight, averaged about $4.00, hence wheat growing was not near so profitable. Probably there has been shipped during the year 200 cars of live hogs, representing a capital of $200,000. This branch of industry seems to be limitless in Cherokee. Corn is so easily produced, and hogs are so healthy, not a single case of hog cholera having yet been known in the county.

It may appear to some that the length of the winters in Northwestern Iowa presents difficulties in the way of stock raising, as to render it unprofitable. Such, however, is not the case. Cattle glean a portion of their living on the prairie as late as December and herding usually begins on the first of May, at which date it is presumed cattle can subsist without feed. Winter feeding costs little beyond labor. The acreage of grass is practically limitless, and all the hay necessary for any amount of stock can be had for the cutting. The nutritious qualities of Northwestern prairie grass are well known, and the quality of beef fed from it is regarded as very superior. Northwestern Iowa stock commands a very ready market in Chicago, bringing always good prices. The ease with which cattle can be kept applies equally to horses. As yet but little has been done with sheep in this county, but the bluffy lands along the rivers have always been regarded as well adapted for sheep. The profits of stock raising are manifested by the fact that all who have tried it have done well, and it is an annually increasing industry.

                        FENCING
"But how can people get along without fencing?" is the question that naturally arises. There are two methods of regulating the conflicting interest between stock raising and grain growing. The one is to leave the grain raiser to guard his crops, the other is compel the stock men to watch his stock. In the majority of states grain fields are fenced, because stock is permitted to run at large. In Iowa the state law leaves it with each county to adopt either system and in Northwestern Iowa the absence of fencing material caused  the adoption of the "Herd Law," by which cattle are not permitted to trespass on grain fields under penalty. The usual method is for some one to herd the cattle of the neighborhood by day driving them in the evening into a corral or pen, where they are kept over night. The method is simple, inexpensive, and popular with the people. Those who desire to fence pastures for hogs etc . can purchase cedar p posts at the lumber yards at $25 per hundred, and fencing boards at $15  per 1000 feet. A barbed wire is used quite extensively, fastened to posts 16 or 20 feet apart, and makes an effective fence against horses and cattle, much encouragement has been given to hedge planting, the state and county permitting a certain rebate on taxation for each half mile of young hedge. There are in Cherokee County a number of very beautiful hedges, principally of white willow. It is not at all probable that the Herd law will soon be repealed, so that fencing is not really a necessity, yet an enclosure of a few acres is almost indispensable to every farmer, and this can be had at a trifling cost. Osage orange has not proved a success, nor is it likely to in this climate, but the English white willow in many of the Cherokee hedges is fifteen feet high and bushy as a brush fence.


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