Farm Tools
Transcription
Farm Tools
Farm Tools the Sappony Way by Kara Stewart Farm Tools the Sappony Way was written by Kara Stewart, a Sappony tribal member, for the Sappony tribe. 2006, 2011. 0 The Sappony, like many rural people in the southeastern United States, depended on agriculture, or farming, for a living. Tobacco was the primary subsistence crop for the Sappony, along with corn and wheat. The Sappony insignia, found on the cover of this book, features a tobacco leaf in the center, flanked by corn and wheat. The insignia also includes seven stars that represent the seven families, or clans, of the Sappony watched over by God, as do the seven feathers tied together. The three arrowheads were historically the Sappony trading symbol with the colonists. Today, tobacco and other types of farming in the Piedmont region are no longer economically viable. Tribal members have pursued higher education, become skilled in a variety of fields, and currently work in many professions other than farming, including education, medicine, finance, business and technology. The farming tools in this book are a valued part of the Sappony heritage and agricultural history. 1 What is this tool and what was it used for? 2 This is a corn shucking peg. It was used to shuck (pull husks from) ears of corn harvested from the fields. Corn was fed to livestock, such as pigs, cows and horses, and also used to make cornmeal for farming families. What do you think cornmeal was used for by farming families? Cornmeal was used as a breading to fry foods, and was used to make corn muffins, cornbread and other delicious treats! How was the corn shucking peg used? The corn shucking peg was held in the hand like this: so the corn husks could be easily stripped off with the pointed end of the tool. 3 What is this farm tool and what was it used for? 4 The photograph shows a plow. Plows were used to till the soil to prepare it for planting crops like corn, wheat, tobacco, vegetables and other crops. Plows were pulled by a mule or a horse up and down the fields in long rows to make furrows for planting. The mule or horse was hooked to the plow by a singletree (the T-shaped wooden rod in the front of the plow). Singletrees came in different sizes, depending on the farmer’s needs. This photograph below shows four different sizes of singletrees. Singletrees were attached to the plow with shackles. Depending on which singletree a farmer needed, either a straight or a crooked shackle was used to attach the singletree to the plow. The photograph below shows a straight shackle on the left and a crooked shackle on the right. 5 What is this and what was it used for? 6 The photograph shows a corn knife. A corn knife was used to cut down stalks of corn in the fields. The corn stalks with the ears of corn on them were then placed in a shock, or stack, to cure out (dry out). When the corn was dry, it was ready to be shucked (have the husks pulled off) with the shucking peg. The Sappony hand made corn knives using carved wooden sticks for the handles, with a metal blade nailed to the stick. 7 What was this tool used for? 8 This tool was used for tobacco farming. It was used to hold up tobacco leaves so farmers could put soil around the tobacco stalk without the soil getting on the leaves. The process of putting soil around tobacco stalk is called siding up. This tool was used to hold up the lower leaves during siding up so that soil would not cover up the leaves. This particular tool in the photograph is over fifty years old and was used by several generations of Sappony farmers! 9 What is this? 10 The photograph shows a hand-carved wooden ax handle. Many Sappony farmers made their own ax handles by carving them from a piece of wood. A sharp metal ax head, bought from a store, was fitted into the wide end of the handle. Axes have long been used all over the world, mostly to chop wood, and are still widely used today. 11 What is this tool and what was it used for? 12 This is a wood saw. It was used to saw logs into small pieces for firewood to use in the home. Were all Sappony homes heated by firewood? Yes. Oil wasn’t readily available or affordable, but wood was plentiful and much less expensive. This was true of most agricultural communities in southeastern United States, no matter if the people were Indian, White or African American. Are Sappony homes heated by firewood today? A variety of fuel resources, such as natural gas, electricity, oil, and wood stoves are available to everyone today, including the Sappony. 13 What is this tool and what was it used for? 14 Although it is not homemade, this bracing bit was used for boring, or drilling, holes. A bracing bit such as this was used before power tools such as electric drills were invented. How was it used? To use the bracing bit, you held the round end in one hand and cranked the other handle around and around to make the pointed end screw down into the wood, drilling a hole. What do you think farmers might have needed to drill holes in? Walls of buildings used to be held together by wooden pegs fitted tightly into holes, not by screws and nails as is done today. Many families built their own houses and barns using a bracing bit to bore holes for the pegs to hold the walls together. Holes also needed to be drilled into wooden boards to make wagon frames and beds. There were many uses for a bracing bit on a farm! 15 What is this? What did farmers use it for? 16 This is a tobacco planter. Tobacco planters like this were in use by Sappony farmers starting in about the 1930’s. This horse- or mule-drawn tobacco planter enabled farmers to plant more tobacco faster with two people dropping plants simultaneously. You can see the two seats and there is a tray for the plants in front of each seat. 17 Now you know about some of the farm tools used by the Sappony. What do you think it would have been like to be a Sappony farmer? 18