In 1915 the leading agriculturalists in the nation
took the railroad to the Eastern Shore of Virginia to study how the
tiny peninsula
had become a worldwide force in the potato market and in the process
created a vital, wealthy, and by all accounts successful agrarian
society. Clarence
Poe, editor of the
Progressive Farmer, was especially interested
in the doings of the Eastern Shore Produce Exchange. He labeled it a “$5,000,000
truck marketing association” and proclaimed it one of the leading
examples in the nation of the staggering profits that were possible
in
agriculture. The tightly-run exchange had shocked the financial establishments
in Baltimore and Philadelphia when it declared a dividend of 70 percent.
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The headquarters of the Eastern Shore of Virginia Produce
Exchange stood adjacent to the rail yard in Onley. "Do not
make the mistake of supposing that Baltimore can ever become the
distributing point for Eastern Shore goods," the general
manager of the Exchange warned a Baltimore reporter. "The
little country town of Onley,
Va., is now the distributing point and will be such so far
as man can see into the future. Don't you know, sir, that we can
get as good rates from this point as Baltimore or Philadelphia
or New York can possibly get?" |
Steady economic growth had followed the coming of the railroad to the
Eastern Shore but a boom awaited the end of the decade-long depression
of the 1890s. Revived prosperity in the urban North now combined with
a growing population, both native and immigrant, to increase demand
for
fruits and vegetables. Although possessing favorable geographic and transportation
advantages, Eastern Shore farmers hitherto had failed to enjoy the returns
that the expanding market seemed to promise. "In pre-prosperity
days on the Eastern Shore," an observer later remarked, "the
farmers knew how to grow potatoes and grew them. But they didn't know
how to market
them, and so they weren't marketed. They were consigned to their fate,
which more often than not was a tragic one." On occasion, returns
were so small that farmers were paid in postage stamps. In 1900 a group
of Eastern Shore farmers and businessmen sought to improve the region's
position in the volatile national produce market by incorporating as
the
Eastern Shore of Virginia Produce Exchange.
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Published: 31 July 2007
© 2007 William G. Thomas III, Brooks Miles Barnes, Tom Szuba and
Southern Spaces