<p>The first Ayrshire cattle can be traced back to the Scottish
settlers who arrived during this period. These emigrants had
provided their own food for the voyage to Canada, and in
some cases brought a good milch cow to provide fresh milk
on the voyage. She would be disposed of on landing, at
Montreal or in the eastern part of Upper Canada. This
accounts for the early predominance of Ayrshires in Eastern
Ontario. Thus to the period 1830-45 belongs the first foundation
of the pure-bred stock industry.</p>
<p>It was in this period also that the first signs appear of
improved farm implements and labour-saving machinery.
Ploughs of improved pattern, lighter and more effective,
were being made. Land rollers and harrows made in the
factory began to take the place of the home-made articles.
Crude threshing machines, clover-seed cleaners, root-cutters,
and a simple but heavy form of hay-rake came into use. The
mowing machine and the reaper were making their appearance
in Great Britain and the United States, but they had
not yet reached Upper Canada.</p>
<p>The organization of agricultural societies in the various
districts, and the great impetus given to the keeping of good
stock, led in 1843 to the suggestion that a provincial organization
would be of benefit to the farming industry. In the
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_562" id="Page_562"></SPAN></span>
neighbouring State of New York a similar organization had
been in existence since 1832 and successful State fairs had
been held, which some of the more prominent farmers of
Upper Canada had visited. An agricultural paper called
the <cite>British American Cultivator</cite> had been established in
York, and through this paper, in letters and editorials, the
idea of a provincial association was advocated. For three
years the discussion proceeded, until finally, in 1846, there
was organized the Provincial Agricultural Association and
Board of Agriculture for Canada West, composed of delegates
from the various district societies. The result was
that the first provincial exhibition was held in Toronto on
October 21 and 22 of that year. The old Government House
at the south-western corner of King Street and Simcoe
Street, then empty, was used for the exhibits, and the stock
and implements were displayed in the adjoining grounds.
The Canada Company gave a contribution of $200, eight
local societies made donations, about $280 was secured as
gate money, and 297 members paid subscriptions. Premiums
were paid to the amount of $880, the bulk of which went to
live stock; books, which cost about $270, were given as
prizes; and there was left a cash balance on hand of $400.
A ploughing match was held, and on the evening of the first
day a grand banquet was given, attended by the officers and
directors and by some of the leading citizens of Toronto.
Among the speakers at this banquet were Chief Justice
Robinson and Egerton Ryerson, superintendent of education.</p>
<div class="footnotes">
<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></SPAN> See 'Shipping and Canals' in section v. pp. 489-90.</p>
</div>
</div>
<h2>Organized Agriculture, 1846-67</h2>
<p>The organization of this provincial association fittingly
introduces another era in agricultural growth. It is to be
noted that this provincial organization was a self-created
body; it drew at first no government funds direct. It
commended itself to the people, for on July 28, 1847, the
provincial parliament in session at Montreal passed an act
incorporating it under the name of the Agricultural Association
of Upper Canada, and in the charter named as
members a number of the leading citizens of the province.
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_563" id="Page_563"></SPAN></span>
It was governed by a board of directors, two of whom were
chosen annually by each district agricultural society. The
objects set forth were the improvement of farm stock and
produce, the improvement of agricultural implements, and
the encouragement of domestic manufactures, of useful inventions
applicable to agricultural or domestic purposes, and
of every branch of rural and domestic economy. Out of
this provincial association came all the further agricultural
organizations of a provincial nature, and ultimately, some
forty years later, the Ontario department of Agriculture.</p>
<p>The second provincial exhibition was held at Hamilton
in 1847, and Lord Elgin, the governor-general, was in attendance.
He was also a generous patron, for his name appears
as a donor of $100. The address which he delivered at the
banquet has been preserved in the published records and is
copiously marked with cheers and loud applause.</p>
<p>The third exhibition was held at Cobourg in 1848. The
official report of the exhibits indicates that pure-bred stock
was rapidly increasing and improving in quality; but the
most significant paragraph is that dealing with implements,
and this is well worth quoting in full.</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>Of implements of Canada make, the Show was deficient;
and we were much indebted to our American neighbours
for their valuable aid on this occasion. A large number
of ploughs, straw-cutters, drills, cornshellers, churns,
etc., etc., were brought over by Messrs Briggs & Co. of
Rochester, Mr Emery of Albany, and a large manufacturing
firm near Boston. Mr Bell of Toronto exhibited
his excellent plough, straw-cutter, and reaping machine.
The first prize for the latter article was awarded to
Mr Helm of Cobourg for the recent improvements
which he has effected. Mr Clark of Paris exhibited his
one-horse thrashing-mill, which attracted much attention.</p>
</div>
<p>At the fourth exhibition, held at Kingston in 1849, the
show of implements was much more extensive, and comment
was made on the improvement of articles of home manufacture.
At this meeting Professor J. F. W. Johnson, of Edinburgh,
who was making a tour of North America, was present.
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_564" id="Page_564"></SPAN></span>
The address of the president, Henry Ruttan of Cobourg, is
a most valuable reference article descriptive of the agricultural
progress of the province from the first settlements in
1783 to the time of the exhibition. Ruttan was a loyalist's
son, and, from his own personal knowledge, he described the
old plough that was given by the government to each of the
first settlers.</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>It consisted of a small iron socket, whose point entered
by means of a dove-tailed aperture into the heel of the
coulter, which formed the principal part of the plough,
and was in shape similar to the letter L, the shank of
which went through the wooden beam, and the foot
formed the point which was sharpened for operation.
One handle and a plank split from the side of a winding
block of timber, which did duty for the mould-board,
completed the implement. Besides provisions for a year,
I think each family had issued to them a plough-share
and coulter, a set of dragg-teeth, a log chain, an axe, a
saw, a hammer, a bill hook and a grubbing hoe, a pair of
hand-irons and a cross-cut saw amongst several families,
and a few other articles.</p>
</div>
<p>He then refers to the large number of implements then
being pressed upon the farmers, until 'they have almost
become a nuisance to the farmer who desires to purchase a
really useful article.' All of which indicates that a distinctive
feature of the period beginning with 1846 was the introduction
and rapid extension of improved farm machinery.</p>
<p>A few words as to the reaping machine, which contributed
more than any other modern implement to the development
of agriculture in the past century, may not be out of place.
Various attempts had been made at producing a machine to
supersede the sickle, the scythe, and the cradle before the Rev.
Patrick Bell, in 1826, presented his machine to the Highland
Agricultural Society of Scotland for its examination. Bell's
machine was fairly successful, and one was then in operation
on the farm of his brother, Inch-Michael, in the Carse of
Gowrie. One set of knives was fixed, another set worked
above and across these like the blades of a pair of scissors.
The grain fell on an endless cloth which carried and deposited
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_565" id="Page_565"></SPAN></span>
the heads at the side of the machine. A horse pushed it
forward and kept all parts in motion. It was simple, and, we
are told, harvested twelve acres in a day. This was in 1826.
In the <cite>New York Farmer and American Gardener's Magazine</cite>
for 1834 may be found the descriptions and illustrations of
Obed Hussey's grain-cutter and Cyrus H. M<sup>c</sup>Cormick's
'improved reaping-machine.' The question has been raised
as to whether either of these United States inventions owed
anything to the earlier production of Patrick Bell. It was,
of course, the improved United States reaping machines that
found their way into Upper Canada shortly after the organization
of the Provincial Agricultural Association. Our interest
in this matter is quickened by the fact that the Rev. Patrick
Bell, when a young man, was for some time a tutor in the
family of a well-to-do farmer in the county of Wellington,
and there is a tradition that while there he carried on
some experiments in the origination of his machine. The
suggestion of a 'mysterious visitor' from the United States
to the place where he was experimenting is probably mere
conjecture.</p>
<p>This period, 1846 to 1867, was one of rapid growth in
population. The free-grant land policy of the government
was a great attraction for tens of thousands of people in the
British Isles, who were impelled by social unrest, failure of
crops, and general stagnation in the manufacturing industries
to seek new homes across the sea. In the twenty
years referred to the population more than doubled, and the
improved lands of the province increased fourfold. The
numbers of cattle and sheep about doubled, and the wheat
production increased about threefold.</p>
<p>Towards the latter part of the period a new agricultural
industry came into existence—the manufacture of cheese in
factories. It was in New York State that the idea of co-operation
in the manufacture of cheese was first attempted.
There, as in Canada West, it had been the practice to make
at home from time to time a quantity of soft cheese, which,
of course, would be of variable quality. To save labour, a
proposition was made to collect the milk from several farms
and have the cheese made at one central farm. The success
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_566" id="Page_566"></SPAN></span>
of this method soon became known and small factories were
established. In 1863 Harvey Farrington came from New
York State to Canada West and established a factory in
the county of Oxford, about the same time that a similar
factory was established in the county of Missisquoi, Quebec.
Shortly afterwards factories were built in Hastings County,
and near Brockville, in Leeds County. Thus began an
industry that had a slow advance for some fifteen years, but
from 1880 spread rapidly, until the manufacture of cheese in
factories became one of the leading provincial industries.
The system followed is a slight modification of the Cheddar
system, which takes its name from one of the most beautiful
vales in the west of England. Its rapid progress has been
due to the following circumstances: Ontario, with her rich
grasses, clear skies, and clean springs and streams, is well
adapted to dairying; large numbers of her farmers came from
dairy districts in the mother country; the co-operative
method of manufacture tends to produce a marketable article
that can be shipped and that improves with proper storage;
Great Britain has proved a fine market for such an article;
and the industry has for over thirty years received the special
help and careful supervision and direction of the provincial
and Dominion governments.</p>
<p>During this period we note the voluntary organization of
the Ontario Fruit-Growers' Association, a fact which alone
would suggest that the production of fruit must have been
making progress. The early French settlers along the Detroit
River had planted pear trees or grown them from seed, and a
few of these sturdy, stalwart trees, over a century old, still
stand and bear some fruit. Mrs Simcoe, in her <cite>Journal</cite>,
July 2, 1793, states: 'We have thirty large May Duke cherry
trees behind the house and three standard peach trees which
supplied us last Autumn for tarts and desserts during six
weeks, besides the numbers the young men eat.' This was at
Niagara. The records of the agricultural exhibitions indicate
that there was a gradual extension of fruit-growing. Importations
of new varieties were made, Rochester, in New
York State, apparently being the chief place from which
nursery stock was obtained. Here and there through the
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_567" id="Page_567"></SPAN></span>
province gentlemen having some leisure and the skill to
experiment were beginning to take an interest in their gardens
and to produce new varieties. On January 19, 1859, a few
persons met in the board-room of the Mechanics' Hall at
Hamilton and organized a fruit-growers' association for
Upper Canada. Judge Campbell was elected president;
Dr Hurlbert, first vice-president; George Leslie, second vice-president;
Arthur Harvey, secretary. The members of this
association introduced new varieties and reported on their
success. They were particularly active in producing such
new varieties as were peculiarly suitable to the climate. For
nine years they maintained their organization and carried on
their work unaided and unrecognized officially.</p>
<p>To this period belongs also the first attempts at special
instruction in agriculture and the beginning of an agricultural
press. Both are intimately connected with the association,
already referred to, that had been organized in 1846 by some
of the most progressive citizens.</p>
<p>For four years the Provincial Association carried on its
work and established itself as a part of the agricultural life
of Canada West. In 1850 the government stepped in and
established a board of agriculture as the executive of the
association. Its objects were set out by statute and funds
were to be provided for its maintenance. The new lines of
work allotted to it were to collect agricultural statistics,
prepare crop reports, gather information of general value and
to present the same to the legislature for publication, and
to co-operate with the provincial university in the teaching
of agriculture and the carrying on of an experimental or
illustrative farm. Professor George Buckland was appointed
to the chair of agriculture in the university in January 1851
and an experimental farm on a small scale was laid out on
the university grounds. Professor Buckland acted also as
secretary to the board until 1858, when he resigned and was
succeeded by Hugh C. Thomson. He continued his work for
some years at the university, and was an active participant in
all agricultural matters up to the time of his death in 1885.</p>
<p>Provision having been made for agricultural instruction
at the university, the board in 1859 decided to establish a
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_568" id="Page_568"></SPAN></span>
course in veterinary science, and at once got into communication
with Professor Dick of the Veterinary College
at Edinburgh, Scotland. In 1862 a school was opened in
Toronto under the direction of Professor Andrew Smith,
recently arrived from Edinburgh.</p>
<p>The <cite>British American Cultivator</cite> was established in 1841 by
Eastwood and Co. and W. G. Edmundson, with the latter as
editor. It gave place in 1849 to the <cite>Canadian Agriculturist</cite>, a
monthly journal edited and owned by George Buckland and
William M<sup>c</sup>Dougall. This was the official organ of the board
till the year 1864, when George Brown began the publication
of the <cite>Canada Farmer</cite> with the Rev. W. F. Clark as editor-in-chief
and D. W. Beadle as horticultural editor. The board
at once recognized it, accepted it as their representative, and
the <cite>Canadian Agriculturist</cite> ceased publication in December
1863.</p>
<p>The half-century of British immigration, 1816 to 1867, had
wrought a wonderful change. From a little over a hundred
thousand the population had grown to a million and a half;
towns and cities had sprung into existence; commercial
enterprises had taken shape; the construction of railways
had been undertaken; trade had developed along new lines;
the standards of living had materially changed; and great
questions, national and international, had stirred the people
and aroused at times the bitterest political strife. The
changed standards of living can best be illustrated by an
extract from an address delivered in 1849 by Sheriff Ruttan.
Referring to the earlier period, he said:</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>Our food was coarse but wholesome. With the exception
of three or four pounds of green tea a year for a
family, which cost us three bushels of wheat per pound,
we raised everything we ate. We manufactured our own
clothes and purchased nothing except now and then a
black silk handkerchief or some trifling article of foreign
manufacture of the kind. We lived simply, yet comfortably—envied
no one, for no one was better off than his
neighbour. Until within the last thirty years, one hundred
bushels of wheat, at 2s. 6d. per bushel, was quite
sufficient to give in exchange for all the articles of foreign
manufacture consumed by a large family.... The
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_569" id="Page_569"></SPAN></span>
old-fashioned home-made cloth has given way to the
fine broadcloth coat; the linsey-woolsey dresses of
females have disappeared and English and French silks
been substituted; the nice clean-scoured floors of the
farmers' houses have been covered by Brussels carpets;
the spinning wheel and loom have been superseded by
the piano; and in short, a complete revolution in all our
domestic habits and manners has taken place—the consequences
of which are the accumulation of an enormous
debt upon our shoulders and its natural concomitant,
political strife.</p>
</div>
<p>Students of Canadian history will at once recall the story
of the Rebellion of 1837, the struggle for constitutional government,
the investigation by Lord Durham, the repeal of the
preferential wheat duties in England, the agitation for
Canadian independence, and other great questions that so
seriously disturbed the peace of the Canadian people. They
were the 'growing pains' of a progressive people. The
Crimean War, in 1854-56, gave an important though
temporary boom to Canadian farm products. Reciprocity
with the United States from 1855 to 1866 offered a profitable
market that had been closed for many years. Then came the
close of the great civil war in the United States and the
opening up of the cheap, fertile prairie lands of the Middle
West to the hundreds of thousands of farmers set free from
military service. This westward movement was joined by
many farmers from Ontario; there was a disastrous competition
in products, and an era of agricultural depression
set in just before Confederation. It was because of these
difficulties that Confederation became a possibility and a
necessity. The new political era introduced a new agricultural
period, which began under conditions that were
perhaps as unfavourable and as unpromising as had been
experienced for over half a century.</p>
<h2>The Growth of Scientific Farming, 1867-88</h2>
<p>The period that we shall now deal with begins with Confederation
in 1867 and extends to 1888, when a provincial
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_570" id="Page_570"></SPAN></span>
minister of Agriculture was appointed for the first time and
an independent department organized.</p>
<p>From 1792 to 1841 what is now Ontario was known as
Upper Canada; from 1841 to 1867 it was part of the United
Province of Canada, being known as Canada West to distinguish
it from Quebec or Canada East. In 1867, however, it
resumed its former status as a separate province, but with
the new name of Ontario. In the formation of the government
of the province agriculture was placed under the care
of a commissioner, who, however, held another portfolio in
the cabinet. John Carling was appointed commissioner of
Public Works and also commissioner of Agriculture. On
taking office Carling found the following agricultural
organizations of the province ready to co-operate with the
government: sixty-three district agricultural societies, each
having one or more branch township societies under its care,
and all receiving annual government grants of slightly over
$50,000; a provincial board of agriculture, with its educational
and exhibition work; and a fruit-growers' association,
now for the first time taken under government direction and
given financial assistance.</p>
<p>One extract from the commissioner's first report will serve
to show the condition of agriculture in Ontario when the
Dominion was born. 'It is an encouraging fact that during
the last year in particular mowers and reapers and labour-saving
implements have not only increased in the older
districts, but have found their way into new ones, and into
places where they were before practically unknown. This
beneficial result has, no doubt, mainly arisen from the difficulty,
or rather in some cases impossibility, of getting labour
at any price.' It would appear, therefore, that the question
of shortage of farm labour, so much complained of in recent
years, has been a live one for forty years and more.</p>
<p>In the second report of the commissioner (1869) special
attention was directed to the question of agricultural education,
and the suggestion was made that the agricultural department
of the university and the veterinary college might
give some instruction to the teachers at the normal school.
In the following year, however, an advanced step was taken.
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_571" id="Page_571"></SPAN></span>
It was noted that Dr Ryerson was in sympathy with special
agricultural teaching and had himself prepared and published
a text-book on agriculture. The suggestion was made that
the time had arrived for a school of practical science. At the
same time Ryerson had appointed the Rev. W. F. Clark, the
editor of the <cite>Canada Farmer</cite>, to visit the Agricultural department
at Washington and a few of the agricultural colleges of
the United States, and to collect such practical information
as would aid in commencing something of an analogous
character in Ontario. It will thus be seen that the two
branches of technical training—the School of Practical Science
and the Agricultural College—were really twin institutions,
originating, in the year 1870, in the dual department of Public
Works and Agriculture. These institutions were the outcome
of the correlation of city and country industries, which were
under the fostering care of the Agriculture and Arts Association,
as the old provincial organization was now known. The
School of Practical Science, it may be noted, is now incorporated
with the provincial university, and the Agricultural
College is affiliated with it.</p>
<p>There were at that time two outstanding agricultural
colleges in the United States, that of Massachusetts and that
of Michigan. These were visited, and, based upon the work
done at these institutions, a comprehensive and suggestive
report was compiled. Immediate action was taken upon the
recommendations of this report, and a tract of land, six
hundred acres in extent, was purchased at Mimico, seven miles
west of Toronto. Before work could be commenced, however,
the life of the legislature closed and a new government came
into office in 1871 with Archibald M<sup>c</sup>Kellar as commissioner
of Agriculture and Arts. New governments feel called upon
to promote new measures. There were rumours and suggestions
that the soil of the Mimico farm was productive
of thistles and better adapted to brick-making than to the
raising of crops. Also the location was so close to Toronto
that it was feared that the attractions of the city would tend
to make the students discontented with country life. For
various reasons a change of location was deemed desirable,
and a committee of farmer members of the legislature was
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_572" id="Page_572"></SPAN></span>
appointed. Professor Miles, of the Michigan Agricultural
College, was engaged to give expert advice; other locations
were examined, and finally Moreton Lodge Farm, near
Guelph, was purchased. After some preliminary difficulties,
involving the assistance of a sheriff or bailiff, possession was
obtained, and the first class for instruction in agricultural
science and practice, consisting of thirty-one pupils in all, was
opened on June 1, 1874, with William Johnston as rector
or principal. Thus was established the Ontario School of
Agriculture, now known as the Ontario Agricultural College.
Its annual enrolment has grown to over fifteen hundred, and
it is now recognized as the best-equipped and most successful
institution of its kind in the British Empire. Its development
along practical lines and its recognition as a potent factor in
provincial growth were largely due to Dr James Mills, who was
appointed president of the college in 1879, and filled that
position until January 1904, when he was appointed to the
Dominion Board of Railway Commissioners. Under his
direction farmers' institutes were established in Ontario in
1884. Dr Mills was succeeded by Dr G. C. Creelman as
president.</p>
<p>The next important step in agricultural advancement was
the appointment in 1880 of the Ontario Agricultural Commission
'to inquire into the agricultural resources of the
Province of Ontario, the progress and condition of agriculture
therein and matters connected therewith.' The commission
consisted of S. C. Wood, then commissioner of Agriculture
(chairman), Alfred H. Dymond (secretary), and sixteen
other persons representative of the various agricultural
interests, including the president and ex-president of the
Agricultural and Arts Association, Professor William Brown
of the Agricultural College, the master of the Dominion
Grange, the president of the Entomological Society, and two
members of the legislature, Thomas Ballantyne and John
Dryden. In 1913 there were but two survivors of this important
commission, J. B. Aylesworth of Newburgh, Ont.,
and Dr William Saunders, who, after over twenty years'
service as director of the Dominion Experimental Farms, had
resigned office in 1911.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_573" id="Page_573"></SPAN></span>
All parts of the province were visited and information
was gathered from the leading farmers along the lines laid
down in the royal commission. In 1881 the report was issued
in five volumes. It was without doubt the most valuable
commission report ever issued in Ontario, if not in all Canada.
Part of it was reissued a second and a third time, and for
years it formed the Ontario farmer's library. Even to this
day it is a valuable work of reference, containing as it does
a vast amount of practical information and forming an invaluable
source of agricultural history.</p>
<p>The first outcome of this report was the establishment, in
1882, by the government of the Ontario bureau of Industries,
an organization for the collection and publication of statistics
in connection with agriculture and allied industries. Archibald
Blue, who now occupies the position of chief officer of the
census and statistics branch of the Dominion service, was
appointed the first secretary of the bureau.</p>
<p>Agriculture continued to expand, and associations for the
protection and encouragement of special lines increased in
number and in importance. Thus there were no fewer than
three vigorous associations interested in dairying: the Dairymen's
Association of Eastern Ontario, and the Dairymen's
Association of Western Ontario, which were particularly
interested in the cheese industry, and the Ontario Creameries
Association, which was interested in butter manufacture.
There were poultry associations, a beekeepers' association,
and several live stock associations. From time to time the
suggestion was made that the work of these associations,
and that of the Agriculture and Arts Association and of the
bureau of Industries, should be co-ordinated, and a strong
department of Agriculture organized under a minister of
Agriculture holding a distinct portfolio in the Ontario
cabinet. Provision for this was made by the legislature in
1888, and in that year Charles Drury was appointed the first
minister of Agriculture. The bureau of Industries was
taken as the nucleus of the department, and Archibald Blue,
the secretary, was appointed deputy minister.</p>
<p>We have referred to the reaction that took place in Ontario
agriculture after the close of the American Civil War and the
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_574" id="Page_574"></SPAN></span>
abrogation of the reciprocity treaty. The high prices of the
Crimean War period had long since disappeared, the market
to the south had been narrowed, and the Western States
were pouring into the East the cheap grain products of a
rich virgin soil. Agricultural depression hung over the
province for years. Gradually, however, through the early
eighties the farmers began to recover their former prosperous
condition, sending increasing shipments of barley, sheep,
horses, eggs, and other commodities to the cities of the
Eastern States, so that at the close of the period to which
we are referring agricultural conditions were of a favourable
and prosperous nature.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />