Plains in Sumter County, Georgia — The American South (South Atlantic)
The Carter Family Garden
Photographed By Sandra Hughes, June 19, 2012
1. The Carter Family Garden Marker
This marker is located on the fence left of the windmill, its marker and behind the family store.
Inscription.
The Carter Family Garden. . Earl Carter always had a garden to add variety to the family's meals. A community sweet potato garden was also planted and shared among the residents who lived nearby. This garden was strictly for the Carter family's use although the farm supervisor, Jack Clark, was responsible for its planting and upkeep. Crops were shared when there were some to spare.
Earl Carter always had a garden to add variety to the family's meals. A community sweet potato garden was also planted and shared among the residents who lived nearby. This garden was strictly for the Carter family's use although the farm supervisor, Jack Clark, was responsible for its planting and upkeep. Crops were shared when there were some to spare.
Topics. This historical marker is listed in this topic list: Environment.
Location. 32° 1.557′ N, 84° 25.99′ W. Marker is in Plains, Georgia, in Sumter County. Marker can be reached from Old Plains Highway, on the right when traveling west. Marker is located in Plains, Georgia on Carter Boy Hood Farm Jimmy Carter National Historic Site United States Department of Interior. Touch for map. Marker is in this post office area: Plains GA 31780, United States of America. Touch for directions.
Millions of Americans eat peanuts every day, but few can identify these botanical oddballs where they grow. Peanuts are not nuts like pecans, nor tubers like potatoes, but legumes, akin to soybeans. During Jimmy Carter's lifetime, peanuts changed from being just a local popular snack to the most important crop in South Georgia.
Photographed By Sandra Hughes, June 19, 2012
5. Collard Greens
Collard are a dish not widely eaten outside the southern states.
The thick leaves taste best after the first frost, slowly boiled in water seasoned with salt pork.
Photographed By Sandra Hughes, June 19, 2012
6. Black-eyed Peas
These garden legumes remain as popular in Georgia today as when Jimmy Carter was a boy, since they produce an abundant harvest of high-protein food in a small space. Black-eyed peas and their cousins, field peas, crowder peas, and cowpeas, are thought to have been introduced into the Southeast from Africa in colonial times. They can be cooked fresh, canned, or dried.
Photographed By Sandra Hughes, June 19, 2012
7. Velvet Beans
Velvet beans were often planted alongside corn. Each fall, corn leaves were stripped and impaled on a cornstalk to dry out for fodder, and the velvet beans were picket. Jimmy Carter remembers the stinging fuzz on these beans made the job one of the most irksome tasks on the farm.
Photographed By Sandra Hughes, June 19, 2012
8. The Carter Family Garden Marker
Credits. This page was last revised on June 16, 2016. It was originally submitted on June 25, 2012, by Sandra Hughes Tidwell of Killen, Alabama, USA. This page has been viewed 379 times since then and 11 times this year. Photos:1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. submitted on June 25, 2012, by Sandra Hughes Tidwell of Killen, Alabama, USA. • Craig Swain was the editor who published this page.