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  2. We see the effects of hunger every day. Investing in Maryland ...

    www.aol.com/see-effects-hunger-every-day...

    Volunteers pack boxes at the Maryland Food Bank in Halethorpe in this file photo from 2020. Photo by Elliot Jaspin We think of early fall as a time of abundance – the peak of the growing and ...

  3. Agriculture in Maryland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agriculture_in_Maryland

    The first documented Africans were brought to Maryland in 1642, as 13 slaves at St. Mary's City, the first English settlement in the Province. [1] Slave labor made possible the export-driven plantation economy. The English observer William Strickland wrote of agriculture in Virginia and Maryland in the 1790s:

  4. For farmers, watching and waiting is a spring planting ritual ...

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    More rain means farmers need to manage that water, which can threaten to erode soil. A 2018 study from researchers at Purdue University predicted runoff from spring rains could increase between 40 ...

  5. Henry A. Wallace Beltsville Agricultural Research Center

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_A._Wallace...

    It is located in unincorporated Prince George's County, Maryland, [4] with sections within the Beltsville census-designated place. [5] [6] The BARC is named for Henry A. Wallace, former United States vice president and secretary of agriculture. BARC houses the Abraham Lincoln Building of the National Agricultural Library.

  6. Maryland poultry farmers urged to practice bird-flu security ...

    www.aol.com/maryland-poultry-farmers-urged...

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  8. Henry Blair (inventor) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Blair_(inventor)

    Henry Blair (c. 1807–1860) was the second African American inventor to receive a US patent. [1]He was born in Glen Ross, Maryland, United States, in 1807.His first invention was the Seed-Planter, [2] patented October 14, 1834, which allowed farmers to plant more corn using less labor and in a shorter time.

  9. U.S. Secretary of Ag highlights progress and threats to ... - AOL

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    The farming population is shrinking in the U.S. from compounding forces like extreme weather events that hinder growing conditions and financial hardship to sustain farming income.