Saturday, January 5, 2013

The man who cannot live in Wakulla county would starve to death in the Garden of Eden, or die of melancholy in Paradise.

P.E. Robinson Jr. tending his flock of Leghorns - Laurel Hill, Florida
P.E. Robinson Jr. tending his flock of Leghorns - Laurel Hill, Florida circa 1935 - Source: Florida State Archives  http://floridamemory.com/items/show/33154


EGGS IN WAKULLA

Wakulla county can heal the world on chickens and eggs. Every merchant in Crawfordville has a lot of egg crates, and they are kept steadily going between here and the markets. Every train that leaves Wakulla on week days carries from 50 to 500 dozen eggs.

In every store you will see tubs and boxes standing around filled with eggs. Eggs are the currency of Wakulla county. A dozen eggs represents the unit of value.  They are a legal tender of any and all debts, except state and county taxes.  Every article of merchandise has an egg price marked on it.

The value of gold and silver may fluctuate but eggs are standard, stationary and stable.  They will always buy a dozen eggs worth of goods.

United States currency went up so high during March and April that seven cents was equal to one dozen eggs in Wakulla, but the dozen eggs were still equal to ten cents worth of goods.

Every man, woman or child, white or black in Wakulla county, brings in basket, bucket or box of eggs when they come to town shopping.  They are the best currency in the world, it is so easy to make change.

The Wakulla farmer and his wife, walk into a store with an air of perfect independence, sit a basket of eggs on the counter and call for what they want.  The price of eggs is never asked, how many eggs are the goods worth to-day? is the only question.  When the farmer spends all of this basket of eggs, he goes home and begins gathering eggs for the next shopping, the supply seems inexhaustible.

The man who cannot live in Wakulla county would starve to death in the Garden of Eden, or die of melancholy in Paradise.


Transcribed from the May 28, 1897, issue of the Gulf Coast Breeze  newspaper


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