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History > Families > Life on the Farm

FARMING IS....
THE FOUNDATION FOR ALL OUR PROSPERTY

Farming set the rhythm of Sandy Spring life for more than two centuries. Virtually everyone worked the land or in related tasks: as wheelwright to make and repair farm wagons, as smithy to forge farm tools and equipment, as miller to grind grain for families and livestock, as storekeeper to buy farm products and supply farm families. When businesses such as the bank and insurance company took root, their founders were primarily farmers.

The rhythm of agriculture perilously faltered in Sandy Spring's greatest crisis, some 200 years ago. The cause was exhaustion of the soil wrought by overcultivation of tobacco and corn. A trickle of Sandy Springers joined a mass emigration to the new frontiers of Ohio and Kentucky. Most held fast, determined to reclaim the land. They built kilns for baking limestone into lime, spread manure, and ground bone, marl, oyster shells, and plaster of paris for fertilizer. Their greatest victory came in 1844 when the newly formed Sandy Spring Farmers' Club spearheaded the use of guano--rotted bird droppings quarried in Peru. Soon Edward Stabler could report a more than eight-fold increase in his wheat crop. The rhythm of farming swelled as never before.

A six-horse team pulls a wagon loaded with bundled wheat at the Hallowell farm Rockland. Young Tom Hallowell straddles a horse. The load heads toward a thresher, probably near the barnyard. Some six-horse team drivers could control the animals without using reins--only words and whistles.

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Lex Barnsley plants corn as Arthur Shorts guides the team. The large Barnsley farm in Olney was a setting for Sandy Spring's popular horse shows.
Pig clubs thrived eight decades ago, fostered by Extension Agent Fred J. van Hoesen to instruct youths in swine husbandry. Here he coaches a member of the Laytonsville Pig Club in 1918.
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Butchering day was an annual ordeal on the farm. This massacre took place at The Highlands, the Robert Miller home at Brown's Corner. Men's tasks were to slaughter the animals, scald and scrape the hides, carve the cuts, and cure the hams, shoulders, bacon, and jowls. Women prepared the kidneys, brains, liver pudding, sausage, scrapple, tenderloin, and spareribs, along with the lard for for cooking and making soap.

From his slaughterhouse on Haviland Mill Road, William Cuff and horses Harry and Polly made Saturday meat deliveries to Sandy Springers in the early 1900's. Ice from his ice house preserved his cuts. "On the way home in his market wagon," recalls granddaughter Ruth Cuff Kemp, "he always stopped at the Sandy Spring Store and bought nickel candies to drop off in the mailbox for Margaret, Billy, and me." The Cuff slaughterhouse was just across the Patuxent in Howard County.

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Small businessmen make their rounds: Tommy Ladson tends the pony cart as chief assistant Joe Nicholson reaches for the next delivery, c. 1929. Thomas A. Ladson became State Veterinarian and head of the University of Maryland Department of Veterinary Science. Stanley Stabler operates a horse-drawn binder at an agricultural demonstration; a co-worker drives the team. Binders cut and bundled wheat, rye, and barley in preparation for threshing; they were replaced by combines, which both reap and thresh. One of the community's most knowledgeable farmers, Stanley Stabler (1907-99) founded the large Pleasant Valley farming operation, still carried on by his sons and grandson.
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Jerry Bell and his Brooke Road blacksmith shop were a Sandy Spring institution during much of the mid-20th century. There the genial giant shod horses, repaired farm equipment, and pounded out the myriad other needs of a rural community, including this fireplace poker for the Hussmans of Roslyn Farm. He died in 1977. Shocks of wheat await threshing at the Frank Palmer farm on Bowie Mill Road. When tobacco farming faded two centuries ago, Sandy Spring farmers turned heavily to wheat, to be ground in local grist mills or wagonned to Baltimore.
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An all-male audience admires teams at the 1942 black horse show, held each year at Charles T. Hill's High Ridge Dairy Farm at Cloverly. Team owners from Washington and more distant areas competed with Sandy Springers, and Hill's horse show attracted a thousand people to the bleachers. With 149 acres, Charles Hill was one of the largest black land owners in the county. He died in 1942 at age 91.
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