Pubdate: Sun, 14 Oct 2001 Source: Sunday News (PA) Copyright: 2001 Lancaster Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.lancasteronline.com/sunnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1102 Author: Jon Rutter THE DOPE ON HEMP HISTORY So how do you think East and West Hempfield were named? Cousin to pot plant proliferated here years ago; some would like to see it growing like a weed again. Several hemp stones repose peacefully under walnut trees at the Landis Valley Museum. Few visitors ask about the cone-shaped millstones or their ties to hemp, said curator Bruce Bomberger. "It's so much forgotten, so much in the past." Long confused in the public mind with marijuana, its psychoactive cousin, hemp inhabits a regulatory gray area that has discouraged cultivation. It hasn't been grown commercially in this country since the late 1950s. Once, though, hemp was a key ingredient of American and Lancaster County culture. Before the Revolutionary War, Pennsylvania's hemp-growing epicenter lay along the Susquehanna River, in Lancaster and York counties. The original Hempfield Township, which was divided into the present- day East and West Hempfield townships in the 1800s, was named after Cannabis sativa, the genus name for both hemp and marijuana. Dense green plantations of hemp yielded oil, seed and fiber vital to early American commerce. For more than a century, people lit their lamps and clothed their families with hemp. Patriots drafted early versions of the Declaration of Independence on hemp paper. Muleskinners shrouded lurching Conestoga wagons and prairie schooners with hempen canvas. Sailors propelled the U.S. frigate Constitution "Old Ironsides" with more than 60 tons of hempen rope and sail. After 1850, hemp lost ground to cheaper products manufactured from cotton, jute, sisal and petroleum. Hemp reinvented itself in the 1930s, thanks to new technology that eased processing and expanded its use. But, hemp proponents claim, timber and oil interests crushed competition from plant-based cellulose by demonizing marijuana and exaggerating its link with hemp. American hemp got a temporary reprieve during World War II, when enemy forces in India and the Philippines cut off sources of jute and other cordage materials. Today, outgoing Lancaster County Farm Bureau President Mary Jane Balmer said, local hemp has the potential to bolster farm incomes and provide an economical and environmentally friendly alternative to petroleum, cotton and pulp wood. After all, she said, it's happened before. "This is something that helped build America." " According to writer John W. Roulac, hemp also shaped ancient civilizations. The Chinese used Cannabis to make rope and fishnets as long ago as 4,500 B.C., Roulac writes in his 1997 book "Hemp Horizons, The Comeback of the World's Most Promising Plant." Hemp cultivation spread to Japan and Korea and then Europe where, Roulac notes, Renaissance artists committed their masterpieces to hemp canvas. An important new hemp venue rose in the 17th and 18th centuries when Europeans colonized the North American wilderness. In 1683, said hemp historian Les Stark of Ephrata, the Pennsylvania General Assembly passed a pro-hemp act that was reinforced by similar measures in 1715, 1726 and 1730. Raising hemp helped the struggling colonies cut European imports, Stark noted. "It was part of our drive for self-sufficiency." Along with flax, the plant became a multi-use staple for colonists, who spun it into cloth and converted it to cordage and paper on which to print bibles and maps. Men often bequeathed hemp to their widows, said Stark, who has written several books on hemp. Records at the Lancaster County Historical Society and the courthouse show that at least 2,500 residents inherited hemp, Stark added. Many more must have grown and handled it. The Pennsylvania hemp industry seems to have been concentrated in this area, Stark said. "Every township in Lancaster County grew hemp. Between 1720 and 1870, there were more than 100 mills that processed hemp fiber." According to an unidentified writer who chronicled the local hemp industry in a Sept. 2, 1928 Sunday News article, the water-driven mills employed cone-shaped grinding stones. The stone "runners" were rolled on their sides across wooden floors to separate the hemp stem from the fibrous bark without crushing it. Bidders have ponied up thousands to buy hemp stones at several recent auctions. But the hemp mills themselves were long gone by 1928, noted the Sunday News, which surmised that "probably they were a Lancaster County idea, adapted from Chilean mill grinders." Hemp farmers sometimes paid the miller for his equipment and did the rolling themselves, the article reported. The task was hard, according to Lancaster historian Jack W.W. Loose, who noted that a machine called a hemp brake was also used to crush the stems. Loose said part of the local crop went to the rope-walk that once stood between Grant and East King streets, near Charlotte. Rope-walks were long, low sheds in which hemp strands were woven into rope. The 1928 story reported that "Much of the Lancaster County grown hemp was sent in Conestoga wagons to the rope-walks of Philadelphia of which there were 10 in 1810." The tall, thick shocks of hemp resisted processing in more ways than one, according to 1928 sources. "There was a belief that there was a devil in the flax stalk (likewise that of hemp) who had fuzzy hempen hair and the girls feared it to the extent of having the boys stand by to fight the devil should he appear." But it wasn't Old Scratch that did hemp in. Eli Whitney started the decline by inventing the labor-saving cotton gin in 1793. Hemp farmers continued to harvest and process by hand until much later. The advent of steam and oil powered ships reduced demand for hempen rigging in the 1800s, when the center of hemp production shifted to the Midwest. Hemp prospects dipped and soared like a rollercoaster after the turn of the century. By the early 1900s, Roulac writes in "Hemp Horizons," the material was used only for cordage and specialty products like birdseed and varnish. But during the war, inventor George W. Schlichten developed technology to separate hemp fibers more efficiently. That, combined with new technology to fashion paper and plastics from hemp-derived cellulose, gradually breathed new life into the industry. Then came the 1937 "Marihuana Tax Act," which outlawed marijuana and required hemp farmers to obtain a government license. The resulting red tape, coupled with the drug stigma, drove most growers and processors out of business, Roulac writes. Other hemp researchers have tied the fall of hemp to conspiracies by big business. Competition from high-cellulose hemp pulp threatened the Hearst Paper Manufacturing Division and other timber companies with losses in the "billions," according to Jack Herer's "The Emperor Wears No Clothes." Hemp fibers also endangered the plastics revolution, according to Herer, who writes that "Coincidentally, in 1937, (the DuPont corporation) had just patented processes for making plastics from oil and coal." Such allegations have never been proven, according to Roulac. Whatever the cause of its decline, however, hemp was back in official favor five years later. As had the Civil War and World War I before it, World War II disrupted foreign fiber shipments and revived domestic production. In 1942, according to a "Hemp For Victory" film produced by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, "patriotic farmers" planted 36,000 acres of seed hemp, an increase of several thousand percent from the previous year. "Hemp is staging a comeback," proclaimed the narrator as the camera zoomed in on some of hemp's "countless naval (and military) uses," which included rope, fire hose and parachute webbing. The rally lasted only as long as the fighting, though. Closing of the wartime mills torpedoed cultivation once more. Global hemp production sank to its lowest level in the early 1990s, according to Roulac, but has since rebounded outside the United States with the dawn of specialty hemp markets. Nobody contacted for this story remembered when hemp last grew in East or West Hempfield Township, or whether "Hemp For Victory" inspired local growers. But while the plant may be down, it's not plowed under. Over the next two years, said Landis Valley Museum President Steve Miller, the museum plans to develop a comprehensive exhibit on the historical uses of hemp in the county. The trend toward heritage tourism has Les Stark seeing green. "If we can start growing hemp again in Lancaster County," he said, "I think it's one angle that will get tourists in here." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth