An Act to establish agricultural experiment stations in connection with the colleges established in the several States under the provisions of an act approved July second, eighteen hundred and sixty-two, and of the acts supplementary thereto.
Diseases to which they are exposed to include antidotes for determined diseases
Chemical composition of useful plants at their different stages of growth
Comparative advantages of rotative cropping as pursued under a varying series of crops
Capacity of new plants or trees for acclimation
Analysis of soils and water
Chemical composition of manures, natural, or artificial, with experiments designed to test their comparative effects on crops of different kinds
Adaptation and value of grasses and forage plants
Composition and digestibility of the different kinds of food for domestic animals
Scientific and economic questions involved in the production of butter and cheese
Other researches or experiments bearing directly on the agricultural industry of the United States as may in each case be deemed advisable, having due regard to the varying conditions and needs of the respective States or Territories
Concession of Agricultural Experiment Stations
December 4, 1893: First Annual Message to the Congress of the United States
"In each State and Territory an agricultural experiment station has been established. These stations, by their very character and name, are the proper agencies to experiment with and test new varieties of seeds; and yet this indiscriminate and wasteful distribution by legislation and legislators continues, answering no purpose unless it be to remind constituents that their representatives are willing to remember them with gratuities at public cost.
Under the sanction of existing legislation there was sent out from the Agricultural Department during the last fiscal year enough of cabbage seed to plant 19,200 acres of land, a sufficient quantity of beans to plant 4,000 acres, beet seed enough to plant 2,500 acres, sweet corn enough to plant 7,800 acres, sufficient cucumber seed to cover 2,025 acres with vines, and enough muskmelon and watermelon seeds to plant 2,675 acres. The total quantity of flower and vegetable seeds thus distributed was contained in more than 9,000,000 packages, and they were sufficient if planted to cover 89,596 acres of land.
In view of these facts this enormous expenditure without legitimate returns of benefit ought to be abolished. Anticipating a consummation so manifestly in the interest of good administration, more than $100,000 has been stricken from the estimate made to cover this object for the year ending June 30, 1895; and the Secretary recommends that the remaining $35,000 of the estimate be confined strictly to the purchase of new and improved varieties of seeds, and that these be distributed through experiment stations.
Thus the seed will be tested, and after the test has been completed by the experiment station the propagation of the useful varieties and the rejection of the valueless may safely be left to the common sense of the people."[1]
- Grover Cleveland, 22nd and 24th President of the United States
Related U.S. Statutes of 1887 Act
U.S. Congressional Provisions for Agricultural Experiment Stations