Difference between revisions of "Mule Day"
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The 1885 stock show featured a parade through downtown Columbia. ''The Daily American'' of April 7, 1885, reported: | The 1885 stock show featured a parade through downtown Columbia. ''The Daily American'' of April 7, 1885, reported: | ||
− | <blockquote>At an early hour yesterday morning, notwithstanding the threatening character of the weather, the streets and Square in Columbia, the county seat of Maury County, were filled with a dense crowd of people, gathered from every part of the county and from neighboring counties, to inspect the stock which had been brought to the exhibition. Nothing, not even a political canvass, can so arouse the people of old Maury as a stock show.... | + | <blockquote>At an early hour yesterday morning, notwithstanding the threatening character of the weather, the streets and Square in Columbia, the county seat of Maury County, were filled with a dense crowd of people, gathered from every part of the county and from neighboring counties, to inspect the stock which had been brought to the exhibition. Nothing, not even a political canvass, can so arouse the people of old Maury as a stock show....At 11 o'clock the procession headed by the Marshal of the day, W. P. Woldridge, and Shepherd's splendid band of music, began to march from the corner of Sixth and North Main, where the stock had been collected. The Shetland ponies owned by E.N. Aikin and Campbell Brown came first. These in number about ten, were eagerly scanned by the gazing crowd, and created some amusement as they passed along the streets....<ref>"Columbia. Dense Crowds in Attendance at the Great Stock Exhibition. Recent Importations of Holstein Cattle and Their Milking Qualities. The Grand Processions, With Its Features of Interest - Stallions, Jacks, Shetland Ponies, Etc." ''The (Nashville) Daily American.'' 7 April 1885. p. 4. Web (newspapers.com). 9 March 2021.</ref><ref>Orr cites a similar article from March 1887 confirming that the April parade was, by that time, considered a tradition. Orr, Gilbert. "Columbia's Mule Day Started in 1933 with $150." in Orr and Orr. ''Mule Day Remembered.'' pp. 12-13.</ref></blockquote> |
− | At 11 o'clock the procession headed by the Marshal of the day, W. P. Woldridge, and Shepherd's splendid band of music, began to march from the corner of Sixth and North Main, where the stock had been collected. The Shetland ponies owned by E.N. Aikin and Campbell Brown came first. These in number about ten, were eagerly scanned by the gazing crowd, and created some amusement as they passed along the streets....<ref>"Columbia. Dense Crowds in Attendance at the Great Stock Exhibition. Recent Importations of Holstein Cattle and Their Milking Qualities. The Grand Processions, With Its Features of Interest - Stallions, Jacks, Shetland Ponies, Etc." | ||
− | The April stock show parade continued into the twentieth century, featuring champion | + | The April stock show parade continued into the twentieth century, featuring champion racehorses as star attractions.<ref>"Hore With World Record in Parade on Stock Show Day; Two Double Record Animals are the Principal Attraction in Line. Argot Hal and The Abbe." ''The Columbia Herald.'' 11 April 1913. p. 11. Web (newspapers.com). 10 March 2021.</ref> |
− | Stock shows and parades were also held on the first Monday of September (also being Labor Day), with the September exhibition | + | Stock shows and parades were also held on the first Monday of September (also being Labor Day), with the September exhibition being generally known as "Mule Colt Day." At the time, the April and September events both were referred to as "Mule Days,"<ref>See Stephenson, cited above.</ref> though the September event traditionally put more emphasis on mules than horses (though in later years Tennessee Walking Horses were also exhibited) because mule colts foaled in the spring are old enough by early September for weaning and sale from a breeder to a feeder.<ref>"Monday 'Colt Day' in Columbia." ''The Nashville Banner.'' 30 Aug. 1940. p. 13. Web (newspapers.com). 10 March 2021.</ref> The relative significance of the April and September events varied from year to year; in some years parades were held in September and in other years "Colt Day" passed with little celebration.<ref>In 1917 the ''Herald'' lamented that little was being done to mark Colt Day that year. "First Monday in September is the Annual Colt Day." ''The Columbia Herald.'' 31 Aug. 1917. p. 1. Web (newspapers.com). 10 March 2021. The September 1914 event, for comparison, featured a parade and a large crowd. "Columbia's Colt Show Great Success." ''The Nashville Banner.'' 8 Sept. 1914. p. 10. Web (newspapers.com). 10 March 2021.</ref> |
===Chamber of Commerce Era (1934-1950)=== | ===Chamber of Commerce Era (1934-1950)=== |
Revision as of 08:42, 10 March 2021
Mule Day is an annual event in Columbia that celebrates the city's heritage, particularly as it relates to the breeding and sale of mules.[1]
The Maury County Bridle and Saddle Club currently organize Mule Day,[2] which they describe as "an annual celebration of all things related to mules."[3]
Contents
History
A mule is a hybrid of a male donkey (the jack) and a female horse (the mare or dam).[4] Before the mid-twentieth century, mules powered many farm activities in Tennessee.[5] Since Biblical times, mules have been prized above other pack animals for their strength, versatility, and longevity.[6][7]
Mule Markets and Stock Shows (1830s-1930s)
Mule Breeding in Maury County
The breeding and sale of mules began in Maury County in the early nineteenth century. The bartering of mules likely began very early in the county's history.[8][9]
One of the first breeders of mules in Maury County was Jonathan Webster, who arrived in Maury County in 1807 and operated a 1,000-acre farm there until his death in 1845. Webster - a Revolutionary War veteran, planter, slave-owner, and politician - began breeding mules after he recognized mules were a superior alternative to oxen in the cotton field.[10][11][12] A state historical marker near Webster's home (which stands in the Cross Bridges community on the Hampshire Pike west of Columbia) credits Webster as the driving force in the commercialization of mules in Maury County.[13][14]
Maury County mules were regarded as being high in quality, due to their feeding on grasses and corn grown in the lime- and phosphate-rich soils of the area..[15] The mules were generally categorized as either larger "sugar mules" so named because of their utility on sugar plantations, and smaller "cotton mules."[16] Mules not only worked the fields, but were a means of transportation; and an item in the Nashville Republican Banner suggests mule races were being held at least as early as 1839.[17]
By 1850, Maury County had more mules and asses than any other county in Tennessee.[18] An 1884 pamphlet described the mule industry as the principal livestock industry of the county and claimed that Maury County led the nation in mules "raised and shipped."[19]
The Columbia Mule Market
The Columbia mule market was the dominant market in Middle Tennessee during its heyday, although other mule markets existed in other towns.[20][21] By the early 1900s the Columbia market was one of the most prominent mule markets in the United States, and claimed to be the largest street mule market (though this claim was occasionally disputed by other towns).[22][23][24]
The Columbia mule market took place in the streets of Columbia on the first Monday of the month from September (or October) through April, with the greatest volume of sales taking place from January to March, shortly before the plowing season began in most of the South. The methods of sale included both public auctions and private transactions, with buyers paying both with cash and on credit. The market attracted both buyers and sellers from across the South; buyers attracted by the quality of mules to be had in Columbia, and sellers by the concentrated demand that ensured their animals would command a premium price. In exceptional years (such as 1935), as many as 10,000 mules were sold in the streets of Columbia.[25][26] The mule market provided economic benefits to Columbia (as dealers needed accommodations) and was supported by the local political leaders and the business community.[27] Rail transportation (and later, trucking) made it possible for buyers to come from other states, and to transport large quantities of mules back to their fields.[28]
During World War I, the British Government bought thousands of Columbia mules for military service. The Columbia mule market began to decline in the 1920s, however, due to the increased use of motorized farm equipment rendering mules obsolete. The Great Depression of the 1930s, however, briefly saw a resurgence of demand and profitability for mule breeders as many cash-strapped farmers returned to using mules.[29][30]
Frances Moore Stephenson, a granddaughter of Billy Moore (one of the early mule breeders of the county), described the scene in the mid-1930s, during the last great years of the mule trade:
If you've never seen a mule market, come to Columbia. The buyers stalk about, look wise, and punch the mules with long sticks. The four streets leading up to the Courthouse, for a block in every direction, are roped off, and turned over to the traders. No man may drive his car in there. It is reserved for the other jackasses.[31]
Stock Shows
Though mule-trading continued on first Mondays throughout the season, the first Monday in April took on special significance in the mid-to-late-nineteenth century. Over the years, several different events - "Trading Day", "Breeders' Day", and "Livestock Show Day" were associated with the month of April. Livestock breeders would show and trade their animals as mule-trading season gave way to mule-breeding season.[32]
The 1885 stock show featured a parade through downtown Columbia. The Daily American of April 7, 1885, reported:
At an early hour yesterday morning, notwithstanding the threatening character of the weather, the streets and Square in Columbia, the county seat of Maury County, were filled with a dense crowd of people, gathered from every part of the county and from neighboring counties, to inspect the stock which had been brought to the exhibition. Nothing, not even a political canvass, can so arouse the people of old Maury as a stock show....At 11 o'clock the procession headed by the Marshal of the day, W. P. Woldridge, and Shepherd's splendid band of music, began to march from the corner of Sixth and North Main, where the stock had been collected. The Shetland ponies owned by E.N. Aikin and Campbell Brown came first. These in number about ten, were eagerly scanned by the gazing crowd, and created some amusement as they passed along the streets....[33][34]
The April stock show parade continued into the twentieth century, featuring champion racehorses as star attractions.[35]
Stock shows and parades were also held on the first Monday of September (also being Labor Day), with the September exhibition being generally known as "Mule Colt Day." At the time, the April and September events both were referred to as "Mule Days,"[36] though the September event traditionally put more emphasis on mules than horses (though in later years Tennessee Walking Horses were also exhibited) because mule colts foaled in the spring are old enough by early September for weaning and sale from a breeder to a feeder.[37] The relative significance of the April and September events varied from year to year; in some years parades were held in September and in other years "Colt Day" passed with little celebration.[38]
Chamber of Commerce Era (1934-1950)
Bridle and Saddle Club Era (1974-2019)
Events
Parade
Beauty Pageant
Fundraisers
Economic Impact
Controversies and Incidents
Association With Slavery
COVID-19 Cancellations (2020-2021)
Other Mule Days
References
- ↑ "TSLA:Exhibits:Got Mules? A celebration of mules in Tennessee history." Tennessee State Library and Archives. Undated. Web (tnsosfiles.com). 5 March 2021.
- ↑ Christen, Mike. "Mule Day organizers, community group tussle over event's moniker." The Daily Herald. 5 March 2021. Web (columbiadailyherald.com). 5 March 2021.
- ↑ Mule Day Office. "About Mule Day." MuleDay.com. Undated. Web (muleday.com). 5 March 2021.
- ↑ Van West, Carroll. "Mules." Tennessee Encylopedia of History and Culture. 1 March 2018. Web (tennesseeencyclopedia.com). 8 March 2021.
- ↑ Van West, cited above.
- ↑ Bennett, Mike. "Mules, mankind share a common history in modern world." The Daily Herald. 28 March 2012. Web (columbiadailyherald.com). 8 March 2021.
- ↑ Orr, Gilbert MacWilliams. "The Mule." in Orr, Lois Harlan and Orr, Gilbert MacWilliams Jr. Mule Day Remembered. Franklin, Hillsboro Press, 2002. pp. 1-2.
- ↑ Orr, Gilbert. "Columbia's Mule Day Started in 1933 with $150." in Orr and Orr. Mule Day Remembered. pp. 9-14.
- ↑ Mike Bennett states in his Duck River Valley Chronicles work that the first mules were brought to Columbia for sale in November 1826, though it is not stated by Bennett what source he relied upon. Bennett, Mike. The Duck River Valley Chronicles. Self-Published e-Book. 2009. p. 129 (61 in section). Web (issuu.com). 9 March 2021.
- ↑ Eades, Brian. National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Webster Farm, Cross Bridges, Tennessee. Murfreesboro, MTSU Center for Historic Preservation, 1996.
- ↑ Smith, Reid. Majestic Middle Tennessee. Prattville, Ala., Paddle Wheel Publications, 1975, p. 29. Web (hathitrust.org). 9 March 2021.
- ↑ Penney, Patsy White (maintainer). "Jonathan Webster." FindAGrave.com. 18 July 2004. Web (findagrave.com). 9 March 2021.
- ↑ Barber, Judith. "Jonathan Webster." hmdb.org. 8 Feb. 2013. Web (hmdb.org). 8 March 2021.
- ↑ Note that others have also been claimed as the originators of Maury County's mule industry; an item in the 1 Sept. 1876 Herald and Mail stated that Thomas Amis and Amzie Caruthers first began breeding mules around 1830 near Culleoka; this claim was repeated (but not directly cited) in the 2010 Mule Day program. "Hurricane Switch Items." The (Columbia, Tenn.) Herald and Mail. 1 Sept. 1876. p. 3. Web (newspapers.com). 8 March 2021; "A History of Mule Day." in Mules Build A Strong America: Mule Day 2010, Columbia, TN April 8th - 11th. Columbia, Mule Day Office, 2010, p. 14. Web (issuu.com). 9 March 2021.
- ↑ Orr, Gilbert. "Maury County Mules and the Mule Industry Here." in Orr and Orr. Mule Day Remembered. pp. 5-6.
- ↑ Orr, Gilbert. "Columbia A Mule Market." in Orr and Orr. Mule Day Remembered. pp. 7-8.
- ↑ "Maury County Jockey Club Races." The Republican Banner.' 31 Oct. 1839. p. 2. Web (newspapers.com). 9 March 2021. This article notes that four mules were entered into a race, which was won by a mule owned by Thomas Wills.
- ↑ DeBow, J. D. B. (Superintendent of the Census). The Seventh Census of the United States: 1850. Washington, Robert Armstrong, 1853, pp. 583-584 (Table XI for Tennessee). Web (cornell.edu). 8 March 2021.
- ↑ Maury County, the blue-grass region of Tennessee. Its agricultural and mineralogical resources, including a view of the county seat, the city of Columbia. Her commerce and industries, schools and churches, past development and future possibilities. Facts for practical minds. Columbia, Herald Book and Job Rooms, 1884, p. 8. Web (hathitrust.org). 8 March 2021.
- ↑ "Abundant Housing for Mule Market." The (Columbia) Herald. 17 Oct. 1919. p. 2. Web (newspapers.com). 9 March 2021.
- ↑ For examples of other mule markets, see for example the indoor market held in Decherd, which promoted itself as being in friendly competition with the Columbia mule market. Priest, J. Percy. "Places and People: Decherd Refuses To Be Licked In Mule Mart War; Invites Charlie McCarthy to Run May Auction." The Nashville Tennessean. 15 March 1938. p. 10. Web (newspapers.com). 9 March 2021.
- ↑ "Maury County Championships." The Columbia Herald. 30 Oct. 1903. Web (newspapers.com). 9 March 2021. (Quoting John Trotwood Moore stating that Columbia's mule market was the "best in the South" and second-only in the nation to the mule market in St. Louis, Missouri).
- ↑ Agee, J. H. and Kerr, J.A. Soil Survey, Maury County, Tennessee. United States Department of Agriculture, Series 1923, No. 6. Washington, Government Printing Office, 1923, p. 154. Web (hathitrust.org). 9 March 2021. (Stating that the Columbia mule market was "probably" the largest by volume of sales in the United States).
- ↑ For example, in 1938 the town of Mayfield, Kentucky made its own claim to being the largest street mule market. "'Mule Market' Claims of Columbia Disputed." The Chattanooga Times. 2 March 1938. p. 7. Web (newspapers.com). 9 March 2021. The Chattanooga Times staff treated Mayfield's claim with skepticism, suggesting that their leaders may not have been familiar with the pomp and circumstance attending Mule Day in Columbia.
- ↑ Julian, Olin. "Columbia Mule Market Is Best In Many Years; Dealers Estimate More Than 10,000 Animals Will Be Shipped From Maury County Before Season Closes; Buyers Throng City Today." The Nashville Banner. 4 Feb. 1935. p. 1. Web (newspapers.com). 9 March 2021.
- ↑ Neel, L. R. "A Farmers' Mule Market That Runs Without Commission Or Advertising." The Country Gentleman, vol. LXXX, no. 11, 13 March 1915, pp. 508-509. Web (hathitrust.org). 9 March 2021.
- ↑ See "Business Men Endorse Stand Mayor Cherry." The (Columbia) Herald. 9 Jan. 1920. p. 2. Web (newspapers.com). 9 March 2021. In 1920, a controversy arose over a letter asking the city to enforce a "blue law" and ban mule dealers from coming into Columbia on Sundays, which was problematic due to the fact that the market day was held on Mondays. Mayor W. O. Cherry (with the enthusiastic support of the community) offered the second floor of City Hall as temporary accommodations for mule dealers who were unable to find a place to rest their heads on the sabbath.
- ↑ Orr, "Columbia A Mule Market" at p. 7 and "Columbia's Mule Day Started in 1933 with $150" at p. 11.
- ↑ Orr, "Columbia's Mule Day Started in 1933 with $150" at p. 12.
- ↑ "Maury County's 'First Monday' Attracts National Attention; Six-Year Rise of Event Compared to Back-to-Land Movement; Depression Started Upturn As Work Stock Replaced Tractors." The Nashville Tennessean. 3 April 1938. p. 1-D. Web (newspapers.com). 9 March 2021.
- ↑ Moore, Frances. "With No Pride of Ancestry." The Nashville Banner Magazine. 5 April 1936. p. 3. Web (newspapers.com). 9 March 2021.
- ↑ Orr, Gilbert. "Columbia's Mule Day Started in 1933 with $150." in Orr and Orr. Mule Day Remembered. pp. 9-14.
- ↑ "Columbia. Dense Crowds in Attendance at the Great Stock Exhibition. Recent Importations of Holstein Cattle and Their Milking Qualities. The Grand Processions, With Its Features of Interest - Stallions, Jacks, Shetland Ponies, Etc." The (Nashville) Daily American. 7 April 1885. p. 4. Web (newspapers.com). 9 March 2021.
- ↑ Orr cites a similar article from March 1887 confirming that the April parade was, by that time, considered a tradition. Orr, Gilbert. "Columbia's Mule Day Started in 1933 with $150." in Orr and Orr. Mule Day Remembered. pp. 12-13.
- ↑ "Hore With World Record in Parade on Stock Show Day; Two Double Record Animals are the Principal Attraction in Line. Argot Hal and The Abbe." The Columbia Herald. 11 April 1913. p. 11. Web (newspapers.com). 10 March 2021.
- ↑ See Stephenson, cited above.
- ↑ "Monday 'Colt Day' in Columbia." The Nashville Banner. 30 Aug. 1940. p. 13. Web (newspapers.com). 10 March 2021.
- ↑ In 1917 the Herald lamented that little was being done to mark Colt Day that year. "First Monday in September is the Annual Colt Day." The Columbia Herald. 31 Aug. 1917. p. 1. Web (newspapers.com). 10 March 2021. The September 1914 event, for comparison, featured a parade and a large crowd. "Columbia's Colt Show Great Success." The Nashville Banner. 8 Sept. 1914. p. 10. Web (newspapers.com). 10 March 2021.