Search Results

Please note: These search results do not contain links to electronic articles hosted by the University of Maryland Libraries, although some may be available online. Please contact the University of Maryland Libraries for assistance in obtaining copies of any of the articles cited in this bibliography.

Your search in the category "Agriculture" returned 351 results in 18 pages.

Showing results 101 through 120.

101)
Dupont, Dolores L. John Barnett, M.D. (1780-1858): Country Doctor & Gentlemen Farmer Talbot County, Maryland. n.p.: Published by the author, 1975.

102)
Eary, Alice and Jean Grose. “Hutton School.” Glades Star, 11 (June 2008): 368-76.

103)
Erickson, Marie Anne. "Crossroads: Ellerton." Frederick Magazine (January 1993): 12-13.

104)
Erickson, Marie Anne. "Crossroads: Urbana." Frederick Magazine (October 1991): 18, 32.

105)
Erickson, Marie Anne. "Crossroads: Yellow Springs." Frederick Magazine (December 1992): 12-13.

106)
Fertig, Barbara C. "The Tobacco Tradition in Southern Maryland." New Jersey Folklife, 11 (1986): 8-13.

107)
Fielding, Geoff. "The County Fair." Maryland 24 (Summer 1992): 38-45.

108)
Fischer, David Hackett. "John Beale Bordley, Daniel Boorstin, and the American Enlightenment." Journal of Southern History 28 (1962): 326-342.

109)
Fishwick, Marshall. "Sheaves of Golden Grain." American Heritage 7 (1956): 80-85.

110)
Folk, Charlotte L. “Honeybees and Beekeeping in the Alleghenies.” Journal of the Alleghenies, 42 (2006): 55-72.

111)
Fox, Jeanette L. "The Settlement of Wickliff's Creek." Chronicles of St. Mary's 31 (September 1983): 81-88.
Annotations / Notes: Wickliff's Creek was an unusual community of freeholds in a colony of largely manorial landholdings. Due to the nature of freeholding, the early settlers were able to be economically successful and politically active, however, the nature of the community, which allowed the landowners to become successful with little, if any, initial backing, limited expansion, kept the community from growing and most settlers emigrated.

112)
Franklin, H. Bruce. The Most Important Fish in the Sea. Washington, DC: Island Press, 2007.
Category: Agriculture | Environment

113)
Fromm, Roger W. "The Migration and Settlement of Pennsylvania Germans in Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina and Their Effects on the Landscape." Pennsylvania Folklife 37 (1987): 33-42.

114)
Fusonie, Alan E. "Sources for Farm Policy Research at the National Agricultural Library." Agricultural History 70 (1996): 449-454.

115)
Fusonie, Alan E. "The History of the National Agricultural Library." Agricultural History 62 (Spring 1988): 189-207.

116)
Fusonie, Alan, and Donna Jean. George Washington, Pioneer Farmer. Mount Vernon, VA: Mt. Vernon Ladies Association, 1998.
Annotations / Notes: Washington's life gives many insights into colonial farming, and he had many contacts among Maryland Agriculturalists.

117)
Fusonie, Alan, and William Hauser. "Climate History at the National Agricultural Library." Agricultural History 63 (Spring 1989): 36-50.

118)
Gagliardo, John G. "Germans and Agriculture in Colonial Pennsylvania." Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 83 (1959): 192-218.

119)
Garrett, Jerre. "Annual Fair of the Cecil County Agricultural Society." Bulletin of the Historical Society of Cecil County 61 (April 1992): 1, 3-4.

120)
Gianni, Jenna L. and Hannah M. Grant. “Peaches of the Piedmont.” Catoctin History, 10 (Spring/Summer 2008): 50-51.
Category: Agriculture