The farmers in turn bought much needed goods and supplies from Wilson's store.
Once every eight or ten weeks, farmers come up from the country and buy it for fertilizer.
Sixteen years earlier, a farmer bought the site for $100.
Waiting for a way to fight this disease, farmers bought cattle and in a few years their butter was known all over the country.
In 1886, for the cost of $500 a farmer could buy five acres, 200 fruit trees and water.
The farmers, however, buy the equipment and own the buildings.
The increased poverty played an important role, as the farmers could not buy gasoline.
To receive the water, farmers must buy their own irrigation systems, which can run more than $60,000 for a 200-acre farm.
Some white farmers even bought land that blacks were living on, so they could have their labor.
They can be registered there and therefore we will know when the farmers have bought them.