Masters Theses

Date of Award

3-1967

Degree Type

Thesis

Degree Name

Master of Science

Major

Agricultural Economics

Major Professor

Curtis F. Lard

Committee Members

Irving Dubov, Joe A. Martin, W.P. Ranney

Abstract

When Europeans came to the New World, they did not generally find cotton in America. However, they did find a cotton fiber plant in the tropics. This plant and species from the Old World were quickly introduced into what is now the Southern United States. Cotton became the number one cash crop for this area and still remains so for most of the states in this region. The value of Tennessee's cotton crop has exceeded the value of other individual crops eighteen out of the last twenty years. The two years when cotton yielded its position as number one were IShS and 1950 when cotton ran a close second to tabacco. Table I shows the value of the Tennessee cotton crop has exceeded one hundred million dollars nine of the years from 195k to 1965 with a value of $109,556,000 in 1965. During this same period, there was a decrease in allotted cotton acreage from 681,000 acres to 547,000 acres. However, per acre yields increased sufficiently to give rise to a general increase in total cotton production as shown in Table I.

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