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The Rural Voice, 1983-01, Page 40N — — — E IMO J1/e .�.�, • ,*.*.*. 4111111111 NE r All the staff from RYAN DRYING LTD. wish everyone a very Merry Christmas and a healthy and prosperous New Year. Thank you for your patronage in 1982. Brussels 887-9261 Walton Seaforth 527-0527 PG. 40 THE RURAL VOICE, JANUARY 1983 111111=1111STRIKING BACK Ontario Agriculture Commission Origins and Proceedings by Detonator Dan The publication in 1981 of the Agricultural Statistics for Ontario marked one hundred years of continuous publication. I personally had the opportunity to acquire a copy of the 1881 Ontario Agricultural Commission Report, and in the next few issues of The Rural Voice, will undertake to share some of the report's con- tents with you. The Honourable John Beverly Robinson, the Lieutenant - Governor of Ontario. at the time, received the report of the Com- missioners. The mandate of the Commission, by Order in Council, April 3, 1880, was to "inquire into the Agriculture resources of the Pro- vince of Ontario, the progress and condition of Agriculture therein and matters connected therewith". The method used in 1880 by the Commission to gather informa- tion was as follows. The first action was to circulate to all townships, to the reeves and clerks, a series of questions related to the Commission's mandate, with persons being invited to council meetings. to consider questions and prepare answers. At the same time, oral examinations of competent witnesses were held in Toronto and other areas such as Seaforth and Teeswater. The Commission also visited certain areas of the pro- vince, attending to such business as cheese factories, vineyards, and horse -breeding establishments. Certain Commission members further elected to visit Great Britain, the U.S.A., and Manitoulin Island. Many papers were received by the Commission, such as letters on forestry and arboriculture, distillery feeding of cattle, and various breeds of cattle and horses. Further, the veterinary surgeons throughout the province presented information as to various stock diseases. The Commission, with great reluctance, had to leave some areas untouched, such as employment of labour, and labour sav- ing devices on the farm, the comparative merits of the system of land ownership, with that of leasing or renting farms, more par- ticularly in the case of small capitalists and the holders of en- cumbered farm properties. (Have situations really changed in 100 years?) The Commission appeared to show constraint in their dealings with agriculture associations and shows, and "The Grants". Recognizing the importance of the circumstances, the Commis- sion recommended that the Government itself consider the above areas. In the next few issues we will share the Commission's Report of 1881 on such subjects as fruit growing, forestry and arboriculture, insects, "Thoroughbred Bulls", livestock feeding, "The Clear Grits", salt, gypsum and bonemeal, education, meteorology, Muskoka and Manitoulin Island. Next month, we will delve into the subject of fruit growing in 1881. Do you know how many barrels of apples were packed in Huron County in 1879? When was the Fruit Growers Association of Ontario formed? And did you know that Gravenstein and Ken- tish Fillbasket are names of apple varieties? Detonator Dan (a pseudonym as you may have guessed) is a prac- tising farmer in the boondocks of Colborne Township, Huron County. 1 1