Departments



Articles

Less

Features: Levy County History
August 21st, 2003

Features: A Celebration of Life
August 21st, 2003

Features: Colonel Maurice "Buzz" Healy Retires from Cedar Key School
August 19th, 2003

Features: Local Society to Compile Pictorial History of Levy County and it`s People
August 19th, 2003

Features: Levy County History
August 14th, 2003

Features: The Symbiotic Relationship of Art and Artist - Kevin Hipe
August 13th, 2003

Features: World Wide Genealogy Resources Will Be Presented at the Levy County Quilt Musuem
August 12th, 2003

Features: Railroad Exhibit Opens at Museum
August 10th, 2003

Features: Levy County History
August 7th, 2003

Features: The Symbiotic Relationship of Art and Artist - Kevin Hipe
August 6th, 2003

Features: Levy County History
August 1st, 2003

Features: Trains and Seminole Indians Presentation at the C.K. Historical Society Museum
July 29th, 2003

Features: Levy County History
July 24th, 2003

Features: Levy County History
July 17th, 2003

Features: Living History Will Be Presented at Levy County Quilt Musuem
July 14th, 2003

More

Levy County Grows Sea Island Cotton

Levy County Grows Sea Island Cotton

Toni Collins


After the close of the Civil War, Levy County residents struggled to get their lives back together and move forward. The Florida Railroad which ran from
Fernandina on the East Coast of Florida to the Cedar Keys on the West Coast, opened up a new avenue for local farmers to market their crops.

One such farmer was James Henry Wilkinson of Newtown, a small community about eight miles northwest of Bronson. Wilkinson grew Sea Island cotton on his farm, a long staple cotton raised originally on the Sea Islands of South Carolina, Georgia and Florida.

Sea Island cotton was a superior cotton of long fiber known for its silky feel. Prior to the Civil War average grades of Sea Island cotton were bringing about 40¢ a pound with superfine bringing as high as one dollar a pound. An average bail of cotton weighed about 550 pounds.

In 1873, Wilkinson consigned a 361 pound bag of cotton to a representative of Gourdin Matthrinin & Company, who added Wilkinson`s cotton to the cotton of other local farmers and sold the shipment to Fraser & Dill of Charleston, South Carolina. Fraser & Dill were "Commission Merchants, Cotton and Rice Factors." Frederick E. Fraser and Joseph Taylor Dill were partners in the business located on Adjers Wharf N. in Charleston.

Wilkinson was paid 45¢ a pound for his cotton for a total of $162.45, but the selling agent deducted $4.73 for shipping and handling, $2.35 for storage, $2.44 for Fire Insurance at @1/2%, and $4.06 for a 2-1/2% Commission. The net amount paid to Wilkinson was $148.87.

Our thanks to Sammye Hart of Chiefland for sharing this piece of family history from the Wilkinson papers. James Henry Wilkinson was married to Mary Amanda Highsmith, one of Sammye`s ancestors. Thanks also to Daniel R.M. Ginnane-Gannon of Charleston, SC for the information on the Fraser and Dill firm.

history

A bill of sale for the sale of Sea Island Cotton by
James H. Wilkinson of Newtown, Levy County on 09 June 1873.

Click for printer friendly version

Email this article to a friend

 

 

© 2013
Cedar Key News

cedarkeynews@gmail.com