Papers (1947-1954), consisting of correspondence, and warehouse tickets for the sale of tobacco.
Tobacco was the primary cash crop grown in North Carolina. During the Colonial period, most the tobacco crop was grown in the counties bordering Virginia. After the 1840s when Virginia began growing "bright tobacco," counties in Eastern North Carolina began to grow the crop more fervently. Farmers discovered that the sandy soil was well suited to grow tobacco and in 1885 farmers in Pitt County planted experiment crops. After several years, the first tobacco warehouse was opened in 1891. By 1899 the county had produced 10,733,010 pound of tobacco on 12,931 acres.
The Clark-Tripp Papers is a collection made up primarily of the warehouse tickets of W. P. Clark and J. J. Tripp of Greenville, North Carolina. Their receipts for 1893, 1894, and 1918 from a variety of tobacco warehouses in Greenville, N.C., demonstrate the increasing value of tobacco as a cash crop between the years 1893, 1894, and 1918.
Gift of Mrs. Jarvis Tripp, Sr.
Processed by M. Quintanilla, October 1986; Updated by N. Hardison, July 2024
Encoded by Apex Data Services
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