If you've ever travelled anywhere in the South, you already know
that a significant part of the landscape is a fast-growing vine with the
strange name of kudzu. With the ability to overwhelm and cover almost
everything in its path, kudzu looks like a green blanket sprawled on top of the
earth, and it’s growing each and every day. But it has not
always been this way. This plant, and especially the alien landscapes it
creates, would be unknown to anyone in the South prior to the 1920s.
Kudzu was actually brought to the United States in 1876, making its
debut at the Centennial International Exhibition of 1876 in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania. Attended by approximately ten million people, including President
Grant, the Centennial Exhibition was the first World's Fair held in the United
States. Located in Philadelphia's Fairmount Park, the fair was a huge success
despite sweltering temperatures through June and July. Visitors making the trek
got to see some amazing products for the very first time, including Alexander
Graham Bell's telephone, a Remington typewriter, Heinz Ketchup, the precursor
to the electric light and Hires Root Beer. The right arm of the Statue of
Liberty was also on display and used as a fundraiser to complete the statue.
Among the international exhibits, the Japanese pavilion (above) included a garden
filled with native Japanese plants. One of the plants, kudzu, was a hit with
American gardeners, who saw the leafy vine with sweet-smelling blossoms as an
ornamental plant.
Kudzu continued to be shown at subsequent world fairs in Chicago and
New Orleans. In Chicago, two enterprising nursery owners from Chipley, Florida
(located in the Florida panhandle), saw kudzu and decided to try and grow it at
their nursery. And grow it did. In the process, Charles Earl (C.E.) and Lillie
Pleas discovered that farm animals really liked to eat the plant (which is
related to a variety of beans) and decided to market kudzu as forage and as a
solution for land conservation in the 1920s rather than an ornamental plant.
The Pleas (right), who were transplanted Quakers from Indiana, were early
environmentalists and saw kudzu as beneficial to the land in many ways. The
couple sold kudzu seedlings by mail order; at the same time, they petitioned
the federal government to certify the plant’s
nutritional value as fodder. When the U.S. Department of Agriculture finally
decided they were right, it looked like the Pleas' crusade on behalf of kudzu
would finally pay off. Unfortunately, they were unable to purchase the required
performance bond for the government contract, and others ultimately benefitted
financially from the Pleas' work. Even so, the Glen Arden Nursery is
"created" as the source of kudzu in the South.
In the 1930s, during the height of the Great Depression, the U.S.
Soil Conservation Service promoted kudzu for erosion control and hired hundreds
of men to plant kudzu through the Civilian Conservation Corps. In addition, farmers
were paid up to $8.00 per acre to plant kudzu fields in the 1940s. Between 1935
and 1942, 100,000,000 kudzu seedlings were distributed across the southeast by
the Soil Conservation Service. In the photo to the left, CCC workers are planting kudzu on a farm in Newberry County, South Carolina. In the 1940s, kudzu's biggest champion was
Channing Cope, an agricultural columnist for the Atlanta
Constitution, who grew kudzu on his farm southeast of Atlanta. Calling kudzu
the "miracle vine," Cope organized the Kudzu Club of America, which
was dedicated to planting it whenever and wherever the opportunity presented
itself. By 1945, an estimated 500,000 acres in the South were planted in kudzu.
As the vine continued to grow at a more rapid pace than anyone
apparently ever imagined, however, enthusiasm for the “miracle
vine” started
to fade. For one thing, kudzu started smothering pine trees and interfered with
the construction and maintenance of roads, telephone poles, etc. In other words,
kudzu was just too much of a good thing. So, after promoting its value as a
conservation tool and use as a forge crop for years (and spreading it far and
wide), the federal government decided to take kudzu off its list of acceptable
cover crops in 1953, and in 1972 reclassified the plant as a "weed."
In 1993, a Congressional study estimated that kudzu was responsible for $50
million in lost timber and agricultural production. And yet, kudzu, as everyone
knows, is here to stay. There are folks still promoting kudzu for a variety of purposes,
including use as basket-making material, as an alternative to hay, as a cure
for alcoholism, and as food for humans. On this front, there are a variety of
recipes out there for kudzu, including kudzu quiche, kudzu jelly and (my
favorite) fried kudzu chips!
Photo and Image Sources:
(1) Kudzu #1: http://www.themuslimtimes.org
(2) Japanese pavilion:
http://www.bu.edu/av/ah/fall2008/ah382/WorldsFairs/index.htm
(3) C.E. and Lillie Pleas:
http://ronmayhewphotography.com/blog/uncle-earl-and-the-kudzu-vine-part-1-by-lynne-mayhew/
(4) CCC workers: from wikipedia
(5) Kudzu #2:
http://visitsandyspringsga.blogspot.com/2011/12/december-11-2011-kudzu-vine-that-ate.html
(6) Kudzu jelly:
http://www.mastgeneralstore.com/products2.cfm/ID/25526/n/Mast-Store-Provisioners-Kudzu-
I have been wondering about these vines. I had just heard about them from the mid1930's as gully plugs or for soil erosion.
ReplyDeleteWhere can I get me a bag of those fried kudzu chips?
ReplyDelete