News from our rich agriculture history

The Farms.com farm and rural history website is dedicated to celebrating and digitizing the last 150 years of success in the Canadian agriculture and food industry. The agriculture and food industries in Canada have a rich heritage of innovation, and have laid a foundation of excellence upon which we continue to grow. We celebrate Canada’s food and agriculture innovations on these pages.
How about Tariff for Chinese Famine Region?
ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED | MARCH 5, 1921 | THE CANADIAN COUNTRYMAN

Of late, the papers have been full of most heart rendering appeals for aid to the poor-famine stricken people of China. It seems to me that our protectionist politicians ought to take this situation to heart. Why should not the food growers in China be protected against outside competition? Anyone who happens to have a supply of food in the drought stricken area can make a fortune out of it

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Life Cycle of the Bloodworm

This diagram appeared in the Summer 1978 issue of the Small Farmers’ Journal. It was not an advertisement, but actually part of an article on new methods for

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Treadle Scroll Saw

This antique scroll saw used a treadle, similar to old sewing machines, to power the motion of the saw. The user would place their feet on the pedals and alternate steps

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WHAT WILL KEEP THE BOYS ON THE FARM
ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED | OCTOBER 15, 1908 | THE FARMER'S ADVOCATE

Again and again the plaintive quest is heard, “What will keep boys on the farm?” Will money-making do it? No, for the exceptionally clever boy can generally make more money in the city, where a certain number of opportunities are found to realize in the labor of others. Will the introduction of urban facilities and privileges into the country keep the boys there? Will rural

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lives lived

MARTIN BURRELL

OCTOBER 15, 1858 - MARCH 20, 1938

Martin Burrell was not the first Federal Minister of Agriculture. But he was, importantly, the first Minister of Agriculture to be a farmer himself. Burrell was born in Faringdon, England and immigrated to Canada in 1883, intending to work as a fruit farmer in the Niagara Peninsula.

Burrell lived in the peninsula for a short time and then settled down outside Grand Forks, British Columbia. He did, however, achieve his occupational goal. Burrell’s fruit farming enterprise was quite successful and he became a member of the B.C. Board of Horticulture as well as the

Gilbert “Gil” Henderson

SEPTEMBER 5, 1926 – JANUARY 30, 2017

Farmer and conservationist. Born Sept. 5, 1926; died Jan. 30, 2017 in Brantford, age 90.

Conservation influenced most of Gil Henderson’s work in agriculture.

He earned a 2010 Lieutenant Governor’s Heritage Award for lifetime achievement for his conservation efforts. Together with his wife Molly, Gil won the Environmental Stewardship Award from the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association in 1998. The couple also won the Brant County Farm Family of the Year Award in 1997. They ran Onondaga Farms, a

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