Essentially
this is a story that is well worth understanding. It made meat
protein available universally at a very competitive price. It
also triggered an attempt to copy the process with other animals.
This all makes animal protein cheap and ample.
The merging alternatives will always demand more labor and inputs and a higher sales price. Fortunately folks are prepared to pay premium pricing for premium food.
While i see problems in terms of Beef and Hogs that may force major changes, i also see the farmed fish industry tracking the success of the chicken industry. Other semi wild stocks of meat animals will continue to be expensive specialty markets which is just as well.
More practically, all these birds and animals serve dual if not multiple purposes on an integrated organic farm protocol. Worse, hidden costs like manure and feed grains are also been subsidized in the factory protocol. This must change although it now appears to be transitional in pacing.
The
chicken of tomorrow will be noted for improved quality and flavor as
the shift to organic sets in.
Chicken of tomorrow
How a massive breeding contest turned a rarely eaten backyard bird into the technological marvel that feeds the world
by Andrew
Lawler 3,100 words
http://aeon.co/magazine/society/why-did-the-chicken-cross-the-world/
A workman gathers eggs
at a huge chicken house, Los Angeles, California, February 1970.
Photo by James P. Blair/National Geographic/Getty
Andrew Lawler is
a contributing correspondent to Science Magazine and Archaeology
Magazine, and his first book, Why Did the Chicken Cross the World?,
is out in December 2014.
Among African
Americans across the South, the pastor had first dibs on the bird
that typically graced the table after church. ‘He ate the biggest,
brownest, and best parts of the chicken at every Sunday meal,’
complained Maya Angelou of the pious glutton Reverend Howard Thomas
in her memoir I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (1969). Often called
the preacher’s bird or the gospel fowl, it had a sacred role among
West Africans, slaves and their descendants who laid the foundation
for America’s love affair with chicken.
British settlers
brought their flocks to Jamestown in 1607, a dozen years before the
first African slaves arrived on Virginia’s shores, and the birds
helped to sustain struggling colonists. Food grew so short in 1610
that the governor made the unauthorised killing of any domesticated
animal, including cocks and hens, punishable by death. In New
England, where chickens arrived on the Mayflower, the Separatist
Edward Winslow in 1623 sent an ailing Native American chief two
chickens to make a healing soup. Grateful for the exotic gift, the
chief is said to have revealed a plot by another tribe to destroy the
nascent colony.
Popular now
The bird, however, was
rarely more than an incidental food in colonial America. On Winslow’s
farm, wild bird remains excavated by archaeologists outnumber those
of chickens three to one, and cattle, pig, sheep and goat bones
dominate. Virginians, meanwhile, feasted on turkey, goose, pigeon,
partridge and duck, along with venison, mutton, pork and beef, as
well as shad, sturgeon and shellfish.
‘Seventeenth- and
18th-century descriptions of colonial foodways ignored the chicken
for the most part,’ says the Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink
in America (2004), edited by Andrew Smith.
For enslaved African
Americans, this humble status proved a welcome boon. In 1692, after
several individuals had bought their freedom with profits from animal
sales, the Virginia General Assembly made it illegal for slaves to
own horses, cattle and pigs. Masters often banned their human
chattels from hunting, fishing or growing tobacco, and at Mount
Vernon raising ducks and geese was an undertaking reserved solely for
George Washington’s white staff. The chicken ‘is the only
pleasure allowed to Negroes; they are not permitted to keep either
ducks or geese or pigs’, one visitor there remarked.
On the expanding farms
of the colonial South, African Americans began to breed, sell, buy
and eat fowl as they saw fit. Many first-generation slaves came from
West Africa, where the birds were widely raised and often used in
ritual sacrifice. Chicken fried in palm oil is still a favourite meal
there. Owners granted slaves authority over chickens because the
birds were of negligible economic importance and reduced plantation
spending on feeding field hands. Just as European Jews gained
expertise in moneylending, a profession disdained by Christians,
poultry became an African-American speciality because whites
preferred beef and pork. Planters often paid their slaves cash for
fowl and eggs, giving black cooks an economic incentive to encourage
their masters to eat more chicken. By the middle of the 19th century,
fried chicken was a quintessentially Southern dish.
On the eve of the
Civil War, exotic fowl arrived from China and Indonesia, and these
large and flamboyant chickens became fashionable to collect and
breed. They were crossed with domesticated birds and, by the 1870s,
new varieties emerged that produced more eggs and meat. This
development coincided with the rapid growth of cities in the northern
United States, and the rising demand for cheap protein to feed
millions of factory workers.
The First World War
pushed the chicken from the backyards of US farms to the forefront of
the war effort. Herbert Hoover, head of the effort to feed American
troops and desperate European civilians, encouraged US citizens to
raise birds so that domestic pork and beef could be sent to the boys
over there. By 1918, the post office allowed chicks to be shipped via
Express Mail, spurring the growth of a hatchery industry that
provided egg-laying birds to farmers around the nation. Five years
later, in a little town in Delaware, a housewife named Celia Steele
ordered 50 chicks from a hatchery through the mail, and by mistake
received 500. She housed them in a small building until they were
large, and then sold them to Jewish markets in New York City. The
broiler industry was born, centred on the Delmarva Peninsula that
includes Delaware, Maryland and Virginia, and serving what was the
world’s largest urban area. In 1928, the Republican National
Committee put out an ad backing Hoover as the presidential candidate,
promising ‘A Chicken for Every Pot’.
It wasn’t until the
Second World War, when President Franklin Roosevelt’s War Food
Administration seized all the broilers on Delmarva for recuperating
veterans, that demand truly soared. By the time the war ended, people
in the US were eating nearly three times as much chicken as they had
at the start.
Poultry entrepreneurs
feared calamity in a postwar world where beef and pork were no longer
rationed. So at an industry meeting in Canada, Howard Pierce, an Iowa
poultry scientist working for the country’s largest food retailer,
A&P, proposed a kind of Manhattan Project for poultry called
the Chicken of Tomorrow. He suggested creating a chicken that looked
like a turkey, with a broader and thicker breast and meatier thighs
and drumsticks, and established the National Chicken of Tomorrow
Committee, comprising all the major US poultry organisations, two
trade publications, and employees of the US Department of
Agriculture, to lead the work.
The goal was to create
the ideal broiler, with ‘breast meat so thick you can carve it into
steaks’
These poultry
authorities – all white and all male – created a scoring system,
wax models with rounded breasts, and strict rules for a national
contest. The goal was to draw on the expertise of small farmers as
well as large commercial breeders to create the ideal broiler, with
‘breast meat so thick you can carve it into steaks’. Given the
relatively scrawny fowl of yesterday, this was a formidable
objective.
To drum up interest,
A&P paid for a short movie narrated by Lowell Thomas, the
nation’s most famous newsreel reporter, full of serious men in ties
and white coats examining chickens while women and black people in
the background go about more menial tasks, such as feeding and
dressing the birds. Given the old emphasis on egg production,
‘relatively few poultrymen took steps to develop better meat-type
chickens’, Thomas explained. The committee also co-sponsored a
Chicken Booster Day which included a New York City banquet and a
screening of the 20th Century Fox film Chicken Every Sunday (1949),
starring Celeste Holm and a child actress named Natalie Wood. The
real star, of course, was the reassuring meal that brought a broken
family back together without breaking the bank. The bird that
provided three seasons of eggs, pin money for rural women, and the
occasional special dinner was recast as a serious competitor to beef
and pork.
Contests in 42 US
states for the Chicken of Tomorrow led to regional finals and two
national competitions, one in 1948 and the last in 1951. Fertilised
eggs from contestants’ birds were hatched under the same
conditions, fed the same food, and given the same vaccinations. Then
they were weighed, slaughtered and dressed. Judges, recruited from
universities, industry and governments, gave points for ‘economy of
production’ and ‘dressed carcass’. Just as the Manhattan
Project brought together university scientists, industrial engineers
and government administrators to unlock the secrets of the atom, the
Chicken of Tomorrow project drew on thousands of poultry researchers,
farmers and agriculture extension agents to fashion a new high-tech
device.
On a sunny June day in
1951, 8,000 chicken fans filled the Razorback Stadium at the
University of Arkansas in Fayetteville in the culmination of a
nationwide effort to create the fowl of the future. As a band played
and the crowd cheered, the US vice president Alben Barkley handed a
California farmer named Charles Vantress a $5,000 cheque for his
winning entry.
The Chicken of
Tomorrow award marked the rise of a vast new industry and the
metamorphosis of the backyard bird into a technological wonder akin
to missiles, the transistor and the thermonuclear weapon, which had
been tested for the first time six weeks earlier. The winning bird
was chosen not for its exotic stature or pure breeding but for its
similarity to a wax model of the perfect carcass as devised by a team
of poultry scientists. The grilled chicken in your sandwich or wrap
comes from a descendant of the bird that Vantress created by crossing
California Cornish males with New Hampshire females.
This hardy bird with
just the right mix of European and Asian genes weighed an average of
more than four pounds, twice the size of a typical barnyard chicken
of the day. The speed with which it became the industry norm is
astonishing. Within a few years, most commercial broilers came from
this stock. A 1951 issue of the Arkansas Agriculturalist declared
that ‘the day of the slick-hipped chick is over’ thanks to ‘the
leaders of the Chicken-of-Tomorrow program’. Newspapers hailed the
scientifically engineered birds as ‘these sweater girls of the
barnyard’.
Barnyards were relics
of the past in the brave new world of the postwar poultry industry.
So, too, was the spectrum of unique taste that made chicken meat and
eggs vary according to breed and region. Modern chickens lived
indoors, ate processed feed from automated bins, consumed a host of
vitamins, breathed ventilated air, and were protected from illness by
vaccinations and antibiotics. The goal was to convert feed into meat
as efficiently and cheaply as possible. This scientific approach
worked. While beef and pork prices shot up in the decade after the
Second World War, chicken prices fell dramatically. In the new
system, farmers were contractors. The company owned the hatcheries
and the slaughterhouses, as well as the birds themselves, and
provided the feed and medicine. The grower raised the chickens in
their own coops – now long and low warehouses – until they
reached their full size and were ready for shipping.
Until the early 1950s,
most US flocks contained no more than 200 chickens, about the size
advocated by ancient Roman agricultural writers 2,000 years earlier.
In the wake of the Chicken of Tomorrow contest, farms raised tens of
thousands of birds, some as many as 100,000. A hen that might live a
dozen years on a farm could now be fattened and slaughtered in six
brief weeks.
There had been nothing
like this in human history. There is no record of any other major
food – meat, dairy, grains, fruits or vegetables – expanding so
quickly in volume and scale. The only exception might be orange-juice
concentrate, which, thanks to scientific tinkering and clever
advertising, expanded rapidly in this same period. Advances in
nutrition and breeding techniques made it possible to grow a bird in
half the time of 1940, while the price per pound plummeted from 65
cents to 29.
By providing feed and
water to the birds – a novelty at the time – Tyson could
transport them over longer distances
What made chickens
different from, say, cows? With a long, entrenched history, ranchers
were slow to embrace academic genetics and corporate methods, and
were generally suspicious of radical change. By contrast, a rising
generation of poultry magnates happily drew on the extensive research
by scientists on chicken genetics to create a more efficient product.
Most of these new
chicken magnates were not farmers but the middlemen who shuttled
birds from farm to city. John Tyson, for example, founder of the
nation’s largest poultry company in Arkansas, now the world’s
largest meat producer, began as an independent trucker. Barely
scraping by in the early days of the Depression, he started hauling
broilers to Kansas City, St Louis and Chicago. By providing feed and
water to the birds – a novelty at the time – he could transport
them over longer distances. During the Second World War, as demand
for chicken rocketed, Tyson bought up hatcheries and feed factories
as well as broiler houses from failed growers, pioneering the
vertical integration model that is at the heart of today’s modern
business.
As chickens were
concentrated in huge numbers, disease could sweep through and wipe
out whole flocks, while feed prices could fluctuate wildly. Only the
largest operations survived and thrived, and Tyson earned a
reputation as a smart and hard-nosed entrepreneur apt to fly into
rages. He was not sentimental about poultry. ‘Just keep it simple,’
said his son Don, who studied agricultural nutrition at the
University of Arkansas before joining the company as general manager
in 1952. ‘Kill the chickens, sell ’em, and make some money.’
The father-and-son team drew on the latest science in feed, genetics
and management to expand their operations: vitamins, vaccines and
antibiotics became essential elements of success through the 1950s.
The fact that the product was chicken was almost incidental. ‘We’re
not committed to the broiler business as such,’ Don later told one
interviewer. ‘We’re committed to so many dollars invested on
dollar returned on that investment.’
In the new order,
older varieties began to vanish. Just as car manufacturers required
uniform parts, these new industrialists wanted a bird that matured
quickly using as little feed and with as little variation as
possible. So the new generation of scientific breeders focused on
creating the most uniform bird possible. To do this, growers
increasingly grew dependent on companies to provide the latest model.
By 1960, 95 per cent of Arkansas growers were under contract with
major corporations such as Tyson. While they muttered about their
status as modern-day sharecroppers, public complaints could lead to
cancellation of those contracts and immediate bankruptcy.
Attempts by growers
and poultry-plant workers to organise themselves into unions never
went very far in the Midwest or South. After all, the thriving
poultry industry brought jobs to some of the country’s poorest
regions, from Arkansas’s Ozarks to the hills of north Georgia.
Friends in Washington ensured minimal federal oversight. The Arkansas
senator J William Fulbright became the industry’s vocal supporter
in Congress. When a bill to tighten inspections was under
consideration, Don Tyson wrote a brief note to Fulbright: ‘Bill,
this would hurt the chicken business.’ The proposed legislation
swiftly died.
Soon chicken was
cheaper than beef or pork, and available neatly packaged according to
cut. Picking out pin feathers, removing the guts, and chopping the
feet off chickens had long been a laborious chore for housewives in
cities as well as the country. Now they did not have to buy an entire
chicken, which made the bird more popular for meals beyond just an
elaborate Sunday dinner. And as people became more conscious of the
dangers of fat in red meat, the low-fat bird became a more appealing
choice.
Tyson’s $10 million
in net sales in 1960 topped $60 million by the end of the decade,
reflecting that shift in consumer tastes. The actual number of
broiler chickens in the US at any one time remained remarkably stable
after the start of the Second World War. But each bird weighed twice
as much and required half the feed and half the time to mature.
More than half of the
nation’s 250,000 poultry workers are women, 50 per cent are Latino,
and an estimated one in five is an illegal immigrant
Falling prices and
thin profit margins, however, left the industry scrambling to come up
with ever-new ways to sell its prosaic product, from frozen dinners
to precooked army rations. Hungry markets opened up overseas. Tyson,
like other major poultry operations, began to spread its product as
well as its plants and way of doing business to Mexico, Europe, Asia
and South America. Upstart businessmen such as Frank Perdue on the
Delmarva Peninsula pioneered advertising campaigns that branded
chickens (even though broilers across the country are nearly
identical), a marketing ploy that the beef industry has yet to copy
successfully.
Perdue also rebranded
the poultry business as masculine, after it had been long disdained
as women’s work. ‘It takes a tough man to make a tender chicken,’
he told television audiences in the 1970s, a century after the
industry had taken its first halting steps. It also still takes women
and minorities behind the scenes. More than half of the nation’s
250,000 poultry workers are women, 50 per cent are Latino, and an
estimated one in five is an illegal immigrant. It is often ugly,
low-paid and dangerous work, as is well-documented in newspaper
articles, government reports and books by writers who worked
undercover in poultry plants. Yet it makes cheap chicken widely
available for consumers, including those who wait for sales on
boneless breasts to stock their freezers. But US ways of processing
chickens, particularly the use of chlorine to clean carcasses, led
the European Union to ban US imports.
Fifty years after the
Chicken of Tomorrow contest, chicken overtook beef as the meat of
choice in the US. The introduction of McDonald’s Chicken McNuggets
and other highly processed poultry – tenders, patties, hot dogs –
helped push the bird over the top. Food scientists discovered that
the meat, like the bird of old, was infinitely versatile, absorbing
flavours more readily than pork or beef, and perfectly suited for
fast food. By 2001, the average person in the US ate more than 80lb
of chicken a year, quadruple the 1950 amount.
The figure is now
close to 100lb. In 2012, Tyson recorded more than $33 billion in
sales, and its weekly production topped 41 million chickens in 60
plants. The broiler business is booming in the US and abroad. The
vertical integration model pioneered by Tyson has spread to rapidly
urbanising South America, India and China, and now the cattle and
pork industries are rushing to copy the approach. Once ignored and
despised by many in the farm sector, poultry is now an international
multibillion-dollar complex that is setting the pace for the world’s
agribusiness.
In Fayetteville, just
off the Fulbright Expressway, a historical marker stands on the
campus of the University of Arkansas near the site of the final
contest for the Chicken of Tomorrow. The sign commemorates the
‘entrepreneurs who built Arkansas’ poultry industry into a major
force in the world economy’. The marker near Razorback Stadium
stands on Maple Street at the entrance of the John W Tyson Building,
an impressive modern complex of 100 laboratories, a
10,000-square-foot pilot processing plant, a host of classrooms and,
as its brochure notes, ‘tasting booths for sensory evaluation’.
Funded by the federal government, poultry companies and a state bond
approved by public referendum, it is modern and clean, a $20 million
concrete-and-steel monument to the success of science and industry.
There’s not a live chicken in sight.
From ‘Why Did the
Chicken Cross the World?: The Epic Saga of the Bird That Powers
Civilisation’ by Andrew Lawler. Copyright © 2014 by
Andrew Lawler. Published by Atria Books, a Division of
Simon &
Schuster, Inc. Reprinted by permission.
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