Cotton
Cotton wagons rolling into Dyersburg, Dyer Co.

Cotton

Cotton was not an aboriginal crop in Tennessee, nor was it widely cultivated by the earliest settlers in mountainous East Tennessee. Gins for separating cotton seed from fiber were brought into Middle Tennessee during the 1780s, however, and soon appeared on estate inventories and tax rolls. Andre Michaux, a French botanist who visited Nashville in 1802, spoke enthusiastically on the wealth to be made from growing and selling cotton. Prices at the New Orleans cotton market were avidly followed by the early Cumberland settlers, and on the frontier cotton doubled as an export commodity sent downriver to market and as an important article of domestic manufacture. Families ginned, carded, and spun the fiber to make thread for a heavy homespun cloth.

Middle Tennessee’s importance in terms of cotton production was eclipsed as richer lands became available. Large-scale cultivation of cotton did not begin until the 1820s with the opening of the land between the Tennessee and Mississippi Rivers. The upper wedge of the Mississippi Delta extends into southwestern Tennessee, and it was in this fertile section that King Cotton took hold. Despite the importance of the crop in Shelby, Fayette, Hardeman, Haywood, and Madison Counties, however, the state’s agriculture as a whole was never devoted exclusively to cotton, as it was in other southern states.

Cotton had a seasonal cycle and work regimen all its own. As the principal cash crop before the Civil War, cotton was planted year after year on the same land; it required, therefore, a deep, rich soil such as West Tennessee offered. The region grew a high grade cotton with a long and heavy staple. Raising and picking cotton demanded a great deal of hand labor, and the crop, typically, was worked by slave gang labor on large plantations. The identification of cotton with slavery was central to this distinctive brand of antebellum agriculture. In that section of Tennessee where cotton was grown, the demands of the crop and the slave/planter system that nurtured it flavored the entire character of life.

The growing of cotton and the entrepreneurial activities surrounding its movements through the world market were responsible for much of the antebellum economic growth in Tennessee. By 1850 Tennessee held fifth place among the cotton-growing states, and the ensuing decade’s high prices fueled a tremendous surge both in cotton production and the number of slaves. Memphis laid claim to the title of “Biggest Inland Cotton Market in the World” and became a headquarters for cotton factors, the financial intermediaries who provided planters with operating capital and marketed the crop. The Civil War had an especially destructive impact on cotton farming, and Tennessee’s output fifty years later was still below what it had been in 1860.

Following emancipation, West Tennessee cotton planters needed a new labor system to replace slavery, and for the next sixty years the sharecropper system of tenancy dominated the region. Mostly African American sharecroppers worked for one-half or one-third of the cotton crop, from which was deducted the cost (plus interest) of seed, mules, and supplies that had been advanced to them by the landlord at the start of the season. Despite chronically low prices for cotton (4 1/2 cents per pound in 1894), the dependency of the Delta on this single crop grew stronger over time. In one of the worst years ever, 1930, over a million acres were in production statewide, an all-time high.

Traditional cotton agriculture was shaken by the successive jolts of the boll weevil; the migration of blacks to the North; the collapse of farm markets after 1920; the 1927 Mississippi River flood; the severe drought three years later; the worst depression in history; and New Deal crop reduction programs. Together these events transformed the old labor intensive and tenant-based system. Tractors replaced tenants, sharecropping declined, and surplus rural laborers migrated to the cities.

After the onset of mechanical pickers in Tennessee during the 1940s, West Tennessee cotton agriculture, which had higher yields than other states, became even more productive. By the 1950s cotton ranked first among Tennessee’s farm commodities in the value of production. Two derivative industries–cottonseed processing in Memphis and textile manufacturing, mainly in East Tennessee–have become important parts of the state’s economy. There are only scattered remnants today of that century or so when cotton dominated the fortunes of much of the state. A way of life that typified rural West Tennessee since Reconstruction has disappeared, and few mourn its passing. According to figures from the Memphis-based National Cotton Council of America, 2,137 farms in Tennessee produced $212.5 million in cotton in 1997.

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  • Article Title Cotton
  • Author
  • Website Name Tennessee Encyclopedia
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  • Access Date November 18, 2024
  • Publisher Tennessee Historical Society
  • Original Published Date
  • Date of Last Update March 1, 2018