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Cotton

Making It Grow Radio Minute
SC Public Radio

Hello, I’m Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. On my travels to and from Sumter I pass the fertile fields of Fort Motte. This year the cotton crop seems phenomenal. It’s the closest thing to a snow-covered landscape I’m likely to see in these days of changing weather patterns. In the forties and fifties cotton was still picked by hand in Calhoun County, Domestic workers would take off from those jobs and pick cotton to supplement their meager wages. An older friend told me he picked cotton on his knees aiming for over two hundred pounds a day. There was a push back on mechanical cotton harvesting machines at one time as the cotton belt states feared massive unemployment of sharecroppers. When the second world war came and the need for workers in factories, use of these machines became widespread.

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Amanda McNulty is a Clemson University Extension Horticulture agent and the host of South Carolina ETV’s Making It Grow! gardening program. She studied horticulture at Clemson University as a non-traditional student. “I’m so fortunate that my early attempts at getting a degree got side tracked as I’m a lot better at getting dirty in the garden than practicing diplomacy!” McNulty also studied at South Carolina State University and earned a graduate degree in teaching there.