48 
BULLETIN 861, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. 
Market Outlets and Distribution. 
The general tendency is to ship toward the North and West, but 
shipments commonly go as far east as Detroit and as far south as 
Oklahoma and Texas. Minnesota, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, and 
Missouri receive the bulk of their early supplies from the Missouri 
Valley and the Ozark sections, and shipments often reach points in 
Colorado, Montana, and the Dakotas. During 1918, a short-crop 
year, data furnished to the Bureau of Markets by the various origi- 
nating railroads show that the shipments from Missouri, Iowa, Kan- 
sas, and Arkansas reached 13 States and 36 different cities. (See 
Appendix. ) 
THE ATLANTIC STATES. 
Location of Producing Sections. 
Grapes are grown in almost every couruVy of the Atlantic States, 
but in only a few sections are they produced in quantities large 
enough to furnish carlot shipments. A few scattered carloads are 
shipped out of New Jersey, Virginia, and North Carolina, but in no- 
eastern States except New York and Delaware does grape production 
assume the proportions of a specialized industry. 
Table 9 shows the full carloadings at different stations throughout 
this territory, as reported to this bureau by the various originating 
railroads. 
Table 9. — Carloadings of grapes by States in the East. 
NEW JERSEY. 
Atlantic Co., Sept.: 
Landisville 
Camden Co., Sept.: 
Lindenwold 
Monmouth Co., Sept.: 
Hazlet 
Middletown 
New Jersey State 
total 
DELAWARE. 
Kent Co., Aug.-Sept.: 
Clayton 
Dover 
Felton 
Hartly 
Milford 
AVyoming 
Delaware State total . 
1916 
1917 
1918 
1919 
3 




3 


2 




1 
1 

5 
4 
1 

23 
45 
13 
11 


11 



2 

1 




1 


10 
23 
13 
2 
34 
69 
39 
13 
Greenes ville Co., Aug. 
Emporia 
1916 1917 1918 1919 
NORTH CAROLINA. 
Martin Co., Sept.: 
E veretts 
Moore Co., July: 
Aberdeen 
Southern Pines. . 
North Carolina State 
total 
13 
Vakieties. 
The States of Delaware and New Jersey furnish early supplies to 
the eastern markets. The standard varieties — the Concord, Niagara, 
Delaware, Catawba, Worden, and Champion — make up the bulk of 
the acreage ; but the Ives, Wyoming, Diamond, Lindley, and Goethe 
