 
The Durham Wheat Industry
Mark A. Carleton, a native of Jerusalem, Ohio, in
the late 1800s brought back to the United States seed from hardy varieties of
disease-resistant "durham" wheat growing in harsh climates in Russia. Carleton’s
work started the United States durum wheat industry, allowing farmers to grow
wheat on vast expanses of land in the Great Plains that were too cold and dry
for traditional varieties.
Carleton worked for the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) in the 1890s, when scientists were concerned that population
growth would outstrip wheat production. Some believed that widespread food
shortages would occur by the 1930s unless researchers found ways of increasing
wheat production. So in 1898, the USDA sent Carleton on expeditions to Russia to
search for new varieties of wheat that yielded more bushels per acre, produced
good crops despite drought, and resisted damaging diseases.
In 1899, he brought back seeds of Kubanca,
spring wheat that started the United States durum wheat industry. "Durham" comes
from a Latin word meaning "hard" and the new wheat had a very hard grain. A year
later Carleton returned to Russia, coming home this time with a hard winter
wheat called Kharkov that also became popular. Farmers plant "spring" wheat in
the spring and harvest it in autumn. "Winter" wheat goes into the ground in the
autumn, and is ready for harvest the following spring.
USDA appointed Carleton chief of its Office of Cereal Investigation, where
he was responsible for other innovations in grain cultivation. He helped make
the Sixty-Day oat the most popular variety grown in the U.S., for instance, and
introduced winter barley cultivation to the Midwest.
Mark Carleton was not the first person to bring those new wheat seeds to the
United States. In the 1870s, for instance, Mennonite immigrants came to the
United States with seeds of hard winter wheat. However, almost nobody knew about
it, or the benefits of switching to the new wheat. Carleton, in contrast,
followed up with a relentless campaign to convince farmers, millers, and
consumers that his new wheat was superior.
Wheat Factoids
Wheat comes in 2 major types, winter wheat and
spring wheat.
- Winter wheat is planted in the fall, goes
dormant during the winter, starts growing again in the spring, and is
harvested in the summer.
- Spring wheat is planted in the spring, grows
throughout the summer, and is harvested in the fall.
The United States produces 5 main classes of
wheat, named according to the color of its kernels. Each needs a specific set of
growing conditions, is grown in a specific region, and has its own special uses.
- Soft red winter wheat grows in the eastern
third of the United States and is used in cakes, cookies, crackers, snack foods,
and pastries.
- Hard red winter wheat grows in the southern
and central plains and accounts for most of the wheat produced in the United
States. Its flour is used mainly in bread.
- Hard red spring wheat and Durham wheat are
both grown in the northern plains. Flour from hard red spring wheat makes
bread, while Durham wheat flour makes spaghetti, macaroni, and other pasta
products.
- White wheat grows mainly in the Pacific
Northwest, and is used much like soft red winter wheat.

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