His initial exploration into this field began by studying farmers and farmhands in the American South who harvest tobacco by hand for a living.
The rest were employed harvesting coffee, cotton, and tobacco, and in some cases in mining.
As a child, he worked in opium poppy fields and harvested tobacco.
Harvested tobacco was air cured in three large wooden barns.
At the age of 19, he went to Canada to harvest tobacco.
Modern Triune is the site of a manufacturing facility that produces equipment for harvesting tobacco.
The following year, 1614, John Rolfe began to successfully harvest tobacco.
Simcoe is also a central area for migrant labour, to harvest tobacco, fruits and vegetables.
His father held a variety of jobs, including harvesting tobacco and driving a truck.
Slaves could enjoy a bug free day of forced labor when harvesting tobacco.