News from our rich agriculture history

The Farms.com farm and rural history website is dedicated to celebrating and digitizing the last 150 years of success in the Canadian agriculture and food industry. The agriculture and food industries in Canada have a rich heritage of innovation, and have laid a foundation of excellence upon which we continue to grow. We celebrate Canada’s food and agriculture innovations on these pages.
WHAT WILL KEEP THE BOYS ON THE FARM
ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED | OCTOBER 15, 1908 | THE FARMER'S ADVOCATE

Again and again the plaintive quest is heard, “What will keep boys on the farm?” Will money-making do it? No, for the exceptionally clever boy can generally make more money in the city, where a certain number of opportunities are found to realize in the labor of others. Will the introduction of urban facilities and privileges into the country keep the boys there? Will rural

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Reporting for Duty Sir

This cartoon originally appeared in the August 24, 1940 issue of Canadian Countryman. It depicts a uniformed egg labelled “100,000,000 Bushels of Canadian

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SELF-LOCKING CARTON

This artifact is a press to create self-locking egg cartons. Prior to the invention of self-locking cartons eggs had to be kept wrapped or secured loosely. This issue

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Work and Needs of the Ontario Agricultural College
ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED | JUNE 20, 1912 | THE FARMER'S ADVOCATE

Leafy June, when all the plant kingdom reaches the zenith of its summer glory, is chosen as the month in which to show the rural population of Ontario the beauties and the uses of the Ontario Agricultural College and Experimental Farm in Guelph. The Farmers’ Institute excursions for 1912 are now in full swing, and great crowds are conducted daily to places of greatest interest. While

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lives lived

George C. Creelman

MAY 9, 1869 - APRIL 18, 1929

George C. Creelman’s life was dedicated to his two greatest passions: higher education and agriculture. As president of the Ontario Agricultural College (O.A.C.), Creelman helped to establish the place of agricultural science as a legitimate and practical discipline, and earned international renown for himself and his school.

In spite of his later contributions to agriculture, George Creelman was not born on a farm. The son of a music teacher, George was born in 1869 in Collingwood, Ontario. When George was nine years old, the Creelman family moved to a fruit farm in Grey

Howard Laing Hutt

OCTOBER 5, 1866 - JUNE 27, 1948

Howard Laing was one of the most foremost figures in the history of Ontario horticulture. Hutt was born on a farm in Stamford township in Welland, Ontario, the oldest of seven children. He began his education at Cornell University before completing a degree at the Ontario Agricultural College in 1891 with a B.S.A.

He was made the head of the horticultural department at the Ontario Agricultural College in 1893, a position he held until 1908. He combined the O.A.C.’s practical and academic programs, and under his leadership many improvements to the horticultural program at

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