Marijuana   

Hemp Revolution Legalizing Marijuana

                                                                                                                                                                                
 
Cannabis Seed Modern day Marijuana  | The Definition of Hemp  | Hemp History  | Hemp Developement  | Cannabis Issues  | Cannabis Medicine  | Cannabis Plant  | Cannabis Seeds  | Hemp Constitution  | Hemp Cottin Pickin  | Hemp History  | Hemp Religion
 | Hemp Revolution Legalizing Marijuana  |

History of Marijuana

Hemp Facts

HEMP REVOLUTION

Contentious as the commercial competition over hemp and finished goods had been, by the time of the American Revolution the British no longer needed America\'s hemp. What they needed was a share of the profits it produced, to pay off their war debts. By 1760, the British had secured control of both Ireland and India, which provided all the hemp they needed. Their relatively wealthy America cousins were still restricted from .selling or shipping hemp either as a raw material or as naval stores to anyone but the British, but the colonies were using most of their hemp domestically, anyway. On the other hand, the British Crown had invested a great deal of time, effort, and money colonizing and protecting America and they expected a return on their investment, which is why the British began imposing taxes on commodities like sugar, stamps, and tea that the colonists used every day.

HEMP USE WAR

The Revolutionary War ended on September 19, 1781 when Washington defeated Comwallis at Yorktown. The Tories disappeared and even many British .soldiers shed their red coats and blended in, as life in the colonies was far better than life at the bottom of the heap in England. And the value of hemp plummeted.

As the jubilation wore off, the idea of independence lost a little of its shine when everyone settled down enough to consider the fact that England was the marketplace of the world. The British had defeated their competitors — the Dutch, Spanish, and the French — either militarily or economically, and there was only a limited market for the products America produced. The French were in the throes of their own revolution. Domestically, the need for hemp dropped dramatically after the war.

But the influx of hopeful new immigrants went on unabated. Between tire end of the Revolutionary War and 1810 the population almost doubled, and by 1830 the population approached 1} million. The inflows of people and investment enabled America to continue growing at an extremely rapid rate.

Meanwhile, both the textile and paper industries were looking for cheaper alternatives. Before Eli Whitney\'s invention of the cotton gin, which mechanically cleaned the cotton and prepared it for spinning, cotton was insignificant — it accounted for less than 5% of all the fabrics produced on this side of the Atlantic. The rest was mainly from hemp, which produced warmer, softer, more durable fabric. Suddenly, cotton had a technological and economic advantage.

Preparing hemp for spinning required separating the fibers from the hemp stalks, an onerous and time-consuming task. Raising and harvesting cotton was more difficult, but with the advantage of slave labor the South kept costs low. Most of the hemp was grown in the Northern states, where slaves were few. America\'s textile industry made a strictly economic decision when it decided to make cotton the industry standard. Of course, it made the Southern plantation owners enormously wealthy, and that is why in the South they call it "King Cotton."

In 1790, the South was producing a thousand tons of cotton per year. By 1860, it was a million tons. In the same period, 500,000 slaves increased to 4,000,000.27

It was also strictly an economic decision when the paper industry switched from hemp to wood. Trees, from the new land\'s plentiful forests, were essentially free for the taking. The quality of the paper wasn\'t as good, nor did it last as long as hemp-based paper; but it was so much cheaper to produce that the benefits outweighed the disadvantages.

The loss of the textile and paper markets was a blow to hemp farmers, and it did affect the fortunes of many Americans, probably including Thomas Jefferson. Like most wealthy American farmers, his income was primarily derived from the cultivation of hemp. Jefferson\'s many years in France and in government no doubt contributed to the deterioration of his farming operations, and with the dwindling hemp market he could not recover. He was only able to hold onto Monticello because his creditors respected him so much they hesitated to throw him out.

However, the major market for hemp was still the shipbuilding and outfitting trade. As late as 1850, hemp was holding on as America\'s third most important agriculture crop, yielding only to cotton and tobacco, with more than 8,000 farms actively engaged in the cultivation of hemp.

And so it went until 1862. Some thirty years after Jefferson\'s death. In a certain sense, hemp was killed in the Civil War. When the sailing ship was dramatically outclassed by the new Ironclads, the Monitor and Merrimac, hemp became obsolete overnight.

For more information on the history of marijuana, cannabis seeds, and many more marijuana facts, check out all the free information on this site to promote your knowledge of marijuana facts and history.


 
Marijuana Hydro Marijuana Hydro