74 lines
3.7 KiB
Plaintext
74 lines
3.7 KiB
Plaintext
|
From: Institute for Hemp <instforhemp@delphi.com>
|
||
|
Newsgroups: alt.drugs
|
||
|
Subject: A SHORT HEMP HISTORY, The Story you were never told in school
|
||
|
Date: Thu, 24 Mar 94 23:45:17 -0500
|
||
|
Message-ID: <BKzMBmd.instforhemp@delphi.com>
|
||
|
|
||
|
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
CANNABIS HEMP HAS A VERY LONG HISTORY OF HUMAN USE
|
||
|
The History you Were never Told.
|
||
|
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
By John Birrenbach, Founder
|
||
|
The Institute for Hemp
|
||
|
|
||
|
The World History of Commercial Cannabis Hemp or Marijuana
|
||
|
Cannabis Hemp has a history that goes back to pre-historic time.
|
||
|
Cannabis Hemp has been found in Tombs dating back to 8,000 B. C.
|
||
|
Hemp Travels The World:
|
||
|
1. 8500BC China 2. 1000BC India
|
||
|
3. 500BC Africa - Asia 4. 500AD Europe
|
||
|
5. 1495 N America 6. 1545 S America
|
||
|
7. 1992 Australia 8. 1993 England
|
||
|
Cannabis use can be documented as far back as 2700 BC (1) in
|
||
|
ancient Chinese writings. These writings tell us that cannabis was
|
||
|
used by the Chinese for a variety of uses. These included fiber, oil,
|
||
|
and as a medicine. By 450 BC history tells us that hemp was being
|
||
|
cultivated in the Mid-East region. From Afghanistan to Egypt hemp was
|
||
|
cultivated for its fiber and drugs. It appears that hemp was first
|
||
|
introduced into Europe around 500-1000 AD. It is known that hemp was
|
||
|
in wide cultivation in Europe by the Sixteenth century. It was
|
||
|
cultivated for its fiber and its seed. The seed was cooked with
|
||
|
barley and other grains and eaten. In 1537 Dioscorides called the
|
||
|
plant Cannabis Sativa, the scientific name that stands today as its
|
||
|
true name. He noted its use in "the stoutest cords" and also its
|
||
|
medicinal properties (2). Hemp was introduced into Chile about 1545
|
||
|
(3) where it was grown for fiber. Hemp was introduced in New England
|
||
|
soon after Puritan Immigrants settled, noting that it grew "twice so
|
||
|
high"(4). In Virginia the early legislature passed many acts to
|
||
|
promote the hemp industry. Before the revolution hemp seems to have
|
||
|
flourished in the area around Lancaster PA. Hemp was first grown in
|
||
|
Kentucky in 1775 (5). In 1802 two extensive Ropewalks were built in
|
||
|
Lexington Kentucky. There was also announced a machine that could
|
||
|
break "eight thousand weight of hemp per day"(6), a huge quantity for
|
||
|
the time. Hemp spread to other states including Missouri by 1835,
|
||
|
Champaign IL by 1875, Nebraska by 1887, California by 1912 (7),
|
||
|
Minnesota by 1880 (8), Wisconsin and Iowa by the early 1920Us. The
|
||
|
cultivation of hemp was stalled by federal action in 1937 by the
|
||
|
imposition of a heavy tax on producers known as the Marijuana Tax
|
||
|
Act. By 1940 the US government reduced the tax so production could
|
||
|
take place during WW II. After WW II, with the heavy tax, cultivation
|
||
|
declined until 1968 when the last legal crop was grown in Minnesota
|
||
|
(9).
|
||
|
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
Footnotes:
|
||
|
1 Yearbook of the Dept of Yearbook of the Dept of Agriculture, L
|
||
|
Dewey, Pg. 296, 1913:
|
||
|
2 Dioscorides. Medica Materia, li bri sex, pg 147, 1537;
|
||
|
3 Husbands, Jose D, US Dept of Agriculture, Bureau of Plant
|
||
|
Industry, Bulletin #153, pg 42, 1909;
|
||
|
4 Yearbook of the Dept of Agriculture, L Dewey, pg 291, 1913;
|
||
|
5 Moore, Brent. A study of the past, the present and future of
|
||
|
the hemp industry in Kentucky, p 16,1905;
|
||
|
6 Michaux, Andre, Travels to the west of the Alleghenies, pg 152,
|
||
|
1805;
|
||
|
7 Yearbook of the Dept of Agriculture, L Dewey, pg 293, 1913;
|
||
|
8 Schoenrock Ruth, Hemp in Minnesota During the war time
|
||
|
emergency, pg15,1966;
|
||
|
9 Robinson, Bob Dr., Hemp experimenter at U of MN 1960-1968
|
||
|
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
Uploaded by John Birrenbach, founder of the Institute for Hemp
|
||
|
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|