Tobacco

luvmygdaughters

Well-Known Member
Why in the state of Maryland, are we not growing tobacco anymore? I know the government gave the farmers some kind of buyout not to plant tobacco, but I was under the impression that we actually exported more tobacco than we sold to local manufacturers. I could be wrong, just thought I heard that somewhere.
 

Grumpy

Well-Known Member
Why in the state of Maryland, are we not growing tobacco anymore? I know the government gave the farmers some kind of buyout not to plant tobacco, but I was under the impression that we actually exported more tobacco than we sold to local manufacturers. I could be wrong, just thought I heard that somewhere.
I've wondered that too, good question.
 

NorthBeachPerso

Honorary SMIB
The tobacco market changed once the buyout was enacted. The farmers saw which way the wind was blowing for the crop (prices had been dropping, costs kept rising, legislation kept getting more restrictive and they couldn't get people to do the work at either end of the season and mid-season to top the plants) so they took the money and transitioned to other crops. The markets changed from the tobacco auctions in the Spring to contracts for specific buyers (RJ Reynolds, Phillip Morris, etc.). That's not a bad system if you think about it but the factors I mentioned above played a big part in the ending.

There are still farmers who grow it (in Calvert up by Northern High School, down at Barstow near the Industrial Park are two I can think of that are main roads. Below Dunkirk along RTE 4, at least a couple years ago) in SoMD in all five Counties as well as on the Shore, although the guys over there switched to other crops decades ago for the most part. The Amish still grow it in St. Mary's but a lot of them have also switched.

Calvert Factoids: I don't know if Hagner Mister stopped growing it, but he once told me that he couldn't take the buyout since he was Assistant Secretary of Agriculture, and then later the Secretary, and it would have been a conflict of interest.
One of the reasons Judge Perry Bown sold his farm in Calvert and moved to Virginia was because of the laws on tobacco in this state.
 

GregV814

Well-Known Member
well, as screwey as it seems, the best agriculture would be dope wouldnt it?
Let Moonhead bring in the migrant Cartels, make Lusby a Sanctuary Zone, have some locals clash with ICE...get some National coveragge for his 2028 run...


OH WAIT, IF SOME OF THIS SARDONIC BANTER IS OVER YOUR HEADS, I STRONGLY APOLOGIZE...LET ME GET MY HEAD OUT OF MY.......
 

TPD

the poor dad
Back in the day, a lot of Maryland type32 tobacco was shipped overseas. Our tobacco was know for its burning qualities, not its flavor. There was a country that actually had a "Maryland" brand cigarette - Denmark maybe? I remember a local farmer who had been on a tobacco trade mission overseas and brought home a pack or two of cigarettes that had the name Maryland written on them.

39293408-1619427749.jpg


Ok looks like those cigarettes were from Germany. And now I'm not really sure if they actually had Maryland tobacco in them. It's been 40 years since I was involved in the tobacco business so my rememberer ain't so good.

 

Wickedwrench

Stubborn and opinionated
Sadly, many of the farmers that took the buyout waited until the money ran out and didn't bother learning a new crop. Most of the tobacco fields I once knew have houses on them now.
 

StadEMS3

Well-Known Member
PREMO Member
It seams like some old tobacco fields rotate a crop but do nothing with it. It grows then it dies or they plow t under.
 

NorthBeachPerso

Honorary SMIB
Sadly, many of the farmers that took the buyout waited until the money ran out and didn't bother learning a new crop. Most of the tobacco fields I once knew have houses on them now.
That wasn't supposed to happen. One of the requirements of the buyout was that the farm remain in agriculture and not turned into growing houses.

Now, there might have been a time limit on that which may have passed so growing houses is now allowed.
 
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Wickedwrench

Stubborn and opinionated
That wasn't supposed to happen. One of the requirements of the buyout was that the farm remain in agriculture and not turned into growing houses.

Now, there might have been a time limit on that which may have passed so growing houses in now allowed.
I'm not sure what the time limit was but it sure didn't seem like it was long before the subdivisions started cropping up.

So much for all of the orchards that were supposed to be everywhere. :ohwell:
 

NorthBeachPerso

Honorary SMIB
I'm not sure what the time limit was but it sure didn't seem like it was long before the subdivisions started cropping up.

So much for all of the orchards that were supposed to be everywhere. :ohwell:
I just looked; the time limit was ten years.

Apparently there was also a stipulation that if the land use changed (from the follow-on crops to, what we're talking about, houses) then the farmer relinquished any further tobacco money. That's probably why you saw the sub-divisions, that money was more than the buyout.
 

Blister

Well-Known Member
I figured it was pretty much over when the auction house(s) in Hughesville shut down. I see that the few remaining growers have found other ways to sell, but I miss seeing the rows of horse-drawn wagons and flatbed trucks alongside the road in Hughesville, tobacco stacked high on each.
I don't miss trying to get to work driving behind a dozen of these through Hughesville, before the bypass was built. Every year you knew it would happen, but not which day the Amish parade would take place.

amish-tobacco-harvest-tnbackroadsphotos-16274677.jpg
 

Gilligan

#*! boat!
PREMO Member
I don't miss trying to get to work driving behind a dozen of these through Hughesville, before the bypass was built. Every year you knew it would happen, but not which day the Amish parade would take place.

View attachment 188436
I hear ya. Fortunately I've never had to commute north from Colton's Point or Piney Point...the two places I've lived down here. I certainly remember how narrow the path through downtown Hughesville was back before the bypass. I also well remember when 5 went right through the middle of Leonardtown before that bypass was built. Cannot imagine that now....so much more traffic.
 
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