Hog droving
Before motorized trucks became common, nearly all livestock went to
market on foot: cattle, horses, mules, sheep, goats, turkeys, ducks, and
geese... Hogs, though, ruled the road. Americans raised more pigs than
any other type of animal, so naturally swine crowded out other beasts on
the turnpikes. The best estimates suggest that in the antebellum South,
five times as many hogs were driven as all other animals combined...
A few farmers from the Bluegrass region of Kentucky—pig country before
the horses took over—walked their hogs through the Cumberland Gap and
all the way to Charleston, South Carolina, a distance of more than five
hundred miles...
The start of the journey was especially difficult, for during that stage
loud noises could send pigs stampeding back toward their home farms.
One solution was to sew up their eyelids: temporarily blinded, the pigs
clumped together and kept to the road by feel. At their destination, the
stitch was clipped and their vision restored. (The young Abraham
Lincoln, charged with driving a recalcitrant drove of hogs aboard a
riverboat, pulled out a needle and thread and started sewing.)...
Because pigs could walk about ten miles a day, inns—often known as wagon
stands—sprang up at ten-mile intervals along the roads, offering
drovers and their pigs food and a place to sleep...
The largest cattle drives, from Texas to Kansas, involved as many as
600,000 cattle a year, but they lasted just fifteen years or so. Hog
droving, by comparison, involved hundreds of thousands of animals
during peak years and on some routes lasted nearly a century.
Excerpts from Lesser Beasts, via Atlas Obscura.
Wow, thanks for posting this! It confirms one of the stories told about my maternal great-great-grandfather, James R, born 1836 in Kentucky. Your post describes pretty much the same thing -- except in this case, James kept pigs much farther north, way up around the Ohio River. He would walk up there, round up the pigs, and drive them to an indeterminate southern location, where they would be transported via flatboat to New Orleans.
ReplyDeleteIt was one of my favorite stories as a child, and I heard it often. I couldn't get over the fact that the pigs' eyelids were sewn shut ... I never doubted it in the least, but it's something that stays in a child's mind! And yes, that's a lot of walking.
Because of these and many other stories, I grew up to become a genealogist (cue mass exodus from the room ... we do run on about family histories) and subsequently found this same GGGF listed in military records as "a Confederate scout" so I have to wonder, was James combining a little recon work with hog droving? We'll never know, but this post made my day. Thanks.