One Row Corn Planter, circa 1855

01

Artifact Overview

Farmers planted corn in hills during the 19th century. That started a year-round effort to raise food for livestock and farm family. Some used single-row planters like this. Then they cultivated with a shovel plow until corn was knee-high. They then planted squash or pumpkins to keep down weeds and retain moisture (a form of double cropping). At harvest they husked ears (to feed pigs) and shocked stalks (to feed cattle).

Artifact Details

Artifact

Corn planter

Date Made

circa 1855

Creator Notes

Attributed to a design by Lorenzo Bachelder of Hampstead, New Hampshire and Samuel H. Bachelder of Haverhill, Massachusetts

Location

at Greenfield Village in Soybean Lab Agricultural Gallery

Object ID

00.3.13404

Credit

From the Collections of The Henry Ford.

Material

Wood (Plant material)
Iron (Metal)

Dimensions

Width: 24 in
Length: 72 in

One Row Corn Planter, circa 1855